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The only people that don't believe, there is suffering and hardships are those who will abuse you now, but secretly beg you for urgent 2k. ![]() |
Funsho is back to where he belongs. Tsunami that will hit APC is still doing press up. ![]() |
As Christians all over the world mark the celebration of Palm Sunday to remember the triumphant entrance of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem, the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, has called on leaders in the country to show empathy and ease the burden of Nigerians. The apex Christian body noted that Jesus entering into Jerusalem was not a show of force, but a message of peace, purpose, and hope, adding that in a tense atmosphere, the saviour chose humility; riding on a colt, not in the trappings of power. “That choice still speaks to us today,” CAN said in a statement signed by Archbishop Daniel Okoh, its President. The statement added, “Across Nigeria, many are feeling the weight of the times. The cost of living is rising. For countless families, daily life is getting harder. Events far beyond our borders; especially tensions involving Iran, Israel, and the United States, are unsettling global energy markets. The impact is already here. Fuel is more expensive. “Transport costs are rising. Food prices are climbing. In moments like this, the calm and clarity of Palm Sunday matter even more. “For many Nigerians, the concern is simple and immediate: how to cope, how to plan, how to stay afloat. When life feels this uncertain, the tone of national life matters. “Words carry weight. Actions have consequences. Palm Sunday reminds us that in tense moments, people need reassurance. They need stability. They need the quiet confidence that those in positions of responsibility understand what they are going through. “That is why the lesson of Palm Sunday matters for leadership. True leadership is not always loud. It is seen in restraint, in empathy, and in a steady focus on the common good. It is reflected in decisions that ease burdens, calm anxieties, and bring people together. This is a time for such wisdom. “For the Church and all people of faith, Palm Sunday is also a call to responsibility. It reminds us of a rare moment when people from all walks of life came together with one purpose: to welcome the Messiah in hope, humility, and expectation. “That same spirit is needed now. We must stand for peace. We must strengthen unity. We must support one another. In a season that can easily tilt towards tension, we must remain a steady source of light and hope. “And to every Nigerian, especially the young and those feeling the strain most deeply, do not lose hope. The challenges are real, but they are not the end of the story. “As we journey through this sacred season, may the spirit of Palm Sunday guide us towards quiet courage, shared purpose, and a renewed commitment to the good of all.” https://dailypost.ng/2026/03/29/palm-sunday-nigerians-suffering-show-empathy-can-tells-leaders/ |
APC and fraud are 5 and 6. It is the horse in front, others follow. ![]() |
I will sing, I will laugh. Kosoba bi ire. ![]() |
Odobe, Let me laugh ahead. ![]() |
A former Governor of Kano State, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has formally resigned from the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP), citing the need for a broader political realignment. Kwankwaso, who served as the party’s presidential candidate in the 2023 general elections, made the announcement in a statement released on Sunday. Smart Video “I wish to formally announce my resignation from the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) with immediate effect,” he said. Describing the move as a difficult but necessary step, the former governor pointed to shifting dynamics within Nigeria’s political space as a key factor behind his decision. “As a committed and bonafide member of the party, this was not an easy decision to make. However, considering the current trajectory of the nation’s political landscape, which calls for strategic realignment, I have found it necessary to identify with another political platform that offers the best opportunity to effectively change the nation,” he said. He expressed gratitude to the party’s leadership, singling out the National Chairman, Ajuji Ahmed, as well as other key organs of the party for their support during his time in the NNPP. “I extend my deepest appreciation to the National Chairman, Ajuji Ahmed and the entire National Working Committee for their steadfast support throughout my time. I also thank the Board of Trustees, the National Executive Committee, and all levels of leadership across the party — from the ward to the state level,” he stated. Kwankwaso also acknowledged members of the Kwankwasiyya Movement and party supporters for their loyalty and commitment. “We shall continue to collaborate and work together towards charting a better and more prosperous future for our dear nation,” he added. He did not indicate which political platform he may align with following his resignation. https://x.com/i/status/2038239033269112992
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Let me go and buy form. ![]() |
God bless him and grant him all he wish for Nigeria and the way he ruined peoples destinies. ![]() |
A recent occupant of the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation has been convicted. His offence: diverting N868.46 million in public funds. Anamekwe Nwabuoku received 72 years in jail. On paper, at least. Typically, top Nigerian officials accused of massive financial crimes do not receive negative verdicts. They are taken to court, and the years come and go as judges change, while the accused carries on with life, cushioned by a retinue of lawyers. Mr Nwabuoku, who served in an acting capacity for just a few weeks, defies this trend. Explainer: Cholera The Treasury House, that quiet engine room where the nation’s numbers are expected to behave themselves, is no longer merely under scrutiny. It is on trial. Not metaphorically. Not rhetorically. Not in the loose, forgiving way Nigerians have learned to speak about scandal, but literally. Remember: Nwabuoku’s predecessor, Ahmed Idris, is still in court. He is facing allegations of ₦109 billion, allegations so staggering that they suggest system capture. Typically, top Nigerian officials accused of massive financial crimes do not receive negative verdicts. They are taken to court, and the years come and go as judges change, while the accused carries on with life, cushioned by a retinue of lawyers. Mr Nwabuoku, who served in an acting capacity for just a few weeks, defies this trend. The Treasury House, that quiet engine room where the nation’s numbers are expected to behave themselves, is no longer merely under scrutiny. But while the system was being fortified, the custodians were not: Otunla, the supposed reformist, would later face prosecution over alleged money laundering and diversion of funds. Four years ago, I argued that Nigeria had embraced a model of government in which authority was freely granted but accountability was never required. “Government without governing” is a craft in which officials are not required to explain themselves, not required to perform, and certainly not required to answer for failure. It is impossible to understand Treasury House today without returning to that moment. Idris arrived in June 2015 and, astonishingly, was reappointed in 2019 even as he was reportedly beyond the statutory age. And when he was eventually arrested in May 2022, the figure attached to the arrest was N80 billion. Think about that: One official, N80 billion. But that figure ballooned to N109 billion in the formal charges before the court. The warning signs were not hidden in classified vaults or encrypted ledgers. They were in the open: embedded in a culture that celebrated proximity to power over fidelity to duty. A culture in which the presidency itself, as I wrote then, “demands neither performance nor responsibility for non-performance of his appointees.” That is where Treasury House broke. Because a treasury is protected not really by firepower or technology, but by consequences. The Nigerian irony is that we build systems without consequences. We resent accountability. Systems do not defend themselves. People do. Institutions do. Culture does. And where these are compromised, the system does not prevent corruption; it enables it. It explains why those who allegedly build the systems return in the morning to vandalise and violate them. We celebrate “anti-corruption” agency leaders not for exemplary sacrifice or demonstrations of accountability, but for big speeches that cleverly protect names. The police do not police. If you are a Senate President or former Governor, or a Minister, anti-corruption agencies invest you with almost-total immunity. This is why Treasury House is embarrassing, and the Idris case matters beyond its astronomical figures. If the allegations are proven, what we are looking at is not theft around the system, but theft through the very architecture of control. But consider that, in a twist that should shame any serious state, Nigeria had replaced Idris with Nwabuoku, supposedly a corrective appointment. Instead, he too fell, convicted of diverting defence-related funds: money that, in any functioning country, would be treated with the highest fiduciary discipline. Pause there. Two successive custodians of the national treasury: one on trial for N109 billion, the other convicted for N868 million. Were this a novel, it would be rejected for lack of credibility. In Nigeria, it passes for governance, and it is why, if Nigerians still have voices, the conversation must move beyond individuals. Because Idris and Nwabuoku are, sadly, only symptoms. The problem is a political culture that protects power and negotiates accountability, a system in which investigations can begin without urgency, prosecutions can proceed without momentum, and cases can stretch until public memory dissolves as judges retire or recuse themselves, prosecutors change, and witnesses age or die. Ours is a peculiarly choreographed elite impunity: arrest, arraignment, adjournment, courtroom manoeuvres, fatigue, forgetfulness. This is why Nwabuoku’s conviction is so extraordinary as to be revolutionary. It is so rare in execution that you almost feel sorry for him until you remember the millions of Nigerians he deprived. But, as is often our story, the larger matter, the one involving N109 billion that is not building infrastructure, saving lives, providing education, or uplifting people, remains unresolved. It is trapped, as is routine and may be for decades, in procedural arguments, real or contrived. So, what is Treasury House? Is it the fortress of fiscal discipline Nigeria claims it to be? Or is it, as the evidence increasingly suggests, a weakly defended citadel, one in which reform and impunity coexist, and where the numbers, however elegantly compiled, cannot tell the truth about themselves? I have persistently written about a presidency that refuses to publish the names behind recovered funds or identify assets it is selling. Three years ago, I wrote again that this government would disobey court orders to disclose accountability records. We shamelessly protect and elevate those who should be behind bars, giving them chieftaincy titles, ministerial chairs, and turbans. Aesop, the Greek philosopher, must have had Nigeria in mind when he said, “We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to high office.” Nigeria’s refusal to name, to disclose, to conclude, has consequences. It creates permissiveness. It signals to friends and enemies that accountability is negotiable. It tells the system that it can bend. But eventually, it breaks. This is what we are witnessing now: not a series of scandals, but the exposure of an institutional condition. A treasury that cannot guarantee its own integrity is not merely inefficient; it is dangerous. Because the damage radiates outward, into federal allocations, into state and local government finances, into public trust, into the credibility of every number the government publishes. Sadly, this is nationwide. When a country can no longer trust its numbers, it cannot plan, it cannot govern, and it cannot grow. The tragedy is not simply that money has been stolen; it is that the institution designed to protect it has lost the presumption of honesty and service. Until Nigeria restores consequence: swift, visible, and unavoidable, Treasury House will remain what it has now become: one of the places where its disappearance is most efficiently arranged. I invite Nigerians who agree that Treasury House is simply a metaphor to refuse to be spectator. https://punchng.com/nigerias-falling-accountant-generals/ |
Nlfpmod, hope CAF sanction Senegal. Beginning of another error in Africa football. ![]() |
Tinubu is not beyond 2027. Call me names, bakomi. Atiku is the next President. ![]() |
Atiku is the next President of Federal Republic of Nigeria. ![]() |
Dynamicboss:Most Nigerians don't know their rights, 19 hours 40 mins for Band A is a breach of agreement, you are even lucky they responded to you. Some people in my area are even afraid to complain, ferling they may be downgraded. If all Nigeria can be united, we will have better services ![]() |
Dejobi is only protecting his name. We can all smell the truth. ![]() |
Morocco over to you, collect your trophy. ![]() |
Even Aso Rock meant to be in Band A ran to Solar for light. ![]() |
Senegal show their AFCON trophy ahead of today’s game!
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The day Our Lord is good is getting married, we will really thank God. ![]() |
lionshare:I am in band A, I don't get 20-24 hours in a day. ![]() |
Nlfpmod ![]() |
You are not in Band A, 18 hours meant for Band B. Band A is 20-24 hours and B is 16-20, so being charged for A and getting B is fraudulent. Nigerians dont know their rights, but content with piecemeal. ![]()
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Angel gabriel, tell your principal to fix roads too. Very unfortunate for the dead. Death meeting you at home. |
Ethically, once the customer is not getting the required hours from that feeder, the feeder has to be downgraded and the tariff adjusted accordingly as you cannot be billing the customer for what they are not consuming. Also, Uket Obonga, a prominent Nigerian consumer rights advocate serving as the national secretary of the Nigeria Electricity Consumers Advocacy Network (NECAN), said there were regulations in which consumers could be compensated, but the DisCos are not engaging in consumer education. “According to NERC’s order, the DisCo shall notify consumers that are supposed to be downgraded or compensated through emails where available or SMS and publish it in their various services, but it is not being done. That is the provisions of the regulations or the orders in the system. So, if they are not applying what is supposed to be done, the DisCos are to compensate customers because you can’t pay what you are not consuming. But the country is in a situation where last year, you had a low generation but the DisCos are raking in billions of naira by just selling darkness to Nigerians,” he said. He lamented that most customers were not aware of their right in seeking compensation from the distribution companies; reason they continue to export them. “Are the customers even aware of this compensation? As I am talking to you, most people don’t know that there is a provision for compensation to be paid when they don’t get the required electricity? In all the places I went to here in Abuja, they were not aware. Are you aware that if you are in Band B or Band C or whatever, you are entitled to compensation? Have you been compensated? This is the situation we find ourselves in. Consumers are not aware,” he noted. Electricity supply will improve within two weeks – FG Meanwhile, the chief technical adviser to the Minister of Power, Adebayo Olowoniyi, said Nigerians should begin to see gradual improvement in electricity supply as maintenance work on a major gas pipeline nears completion, with full restoration expected within two weeks. Olowoniyi said this on Thursday on Arise TV, days after the minister, Adebayo Adelabu issued a public apology over the persistent power outages that have deepened hardship across homes, businesses, schools and industries in recent weeks. Defending the minister’s apology, Olowoniyi said it reflected strong leadership rather than an admission of personal culpability. “I would like to start with the apology from the minister, which we believe is all about taking leadership in the sector. The challenges we have is not necessarily his fault, but as the minister of power he just took it. It was the right leadership step to say, ‘I take ownership of this issue, and I am going to prefer a solution that would ensure that power supply comes back in the shortest available time,’” Olowoniyi said. He explained that the current crisis was largely driven by disruptions to a key gas pipeline that supplies fuel to power plants, noting that about 75 per cent of Nigeria’s electricity generation is gas-dependent. “One of the major gas pipelines in Nigeria was undergoing maintenance; and gradually, that process is being completed. We are sure that within the next two weeks, full gas pressure will be back on the gas pipelines and the power plants will be able to get enough gas, at least to go back to the level of generation they had in the last two to three months,” he said. Olowoniyi expressed confidence that the recovery process had already begun, saying improvements would be gradual but steady. “I will say that from yesterday, we would have gradually started to see some improvement as the pressure on the pipeline gradually starts to build up. We will see continuous improvement over the next couple of weeks,” he said. During his public apology on Tuesday in Abuja, Adelabu told Nigerians that the outages were caused by factors beyond government’s immediate control. He, however, gave a two-week timeline for recovery. “I can tell you that with the committee we have set up and commitments from gas suppliers and the timeline for repair of the gas pipelines, two weeks from now, we should start seeing improvements in supply,” the minister had said. He reiterated federal government’s target of ramping up electricity generation to 6,000 megawatts before the end of 2026, describing the current disruption as a temporary setback. |
When the federal government announced a sudden increase in electricity tariffs for Band A customers in April 2024, it was a conviction that raising their tariffs would ensure a minimum of 20 hours of electricity, jettisoning alternative power sources like generators and preventing the collapse of the electricity sector, which was wallowing in huge debt.https://dailytrust.com/band-a-customers-pay-more-for-darkness/
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Reno is a man without honour, just mynding my business. ![]() |
Jesu ni Balogun oko, amase ja fo ya. It is well. APC will edit so many youths lives. ![]() |
Has Mexico accepted Reno? ![]() |
APC has edited many lives, even deleted some. If you like play ethnic jingo with them. God will reformat your life. ![]() |
Atiku /Obi ticket plus Obidient movement will win the ticket. ![]() |
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