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Iwaeda's Posts

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PoliticsRe: Lagos Govt Sensitises Residents On Traffic And Envirometal Law by iwaeda: 8:30am On Feb 02
Same people breaking traffic law. Last week I saw a LASG car driving against traffic around Jakande. Awon omo oju ori olari. grin grin grin angry angry
Foreign AffairsRe: Video Showing The Attack At The 101 Airbase Of The Niger Republic Air Force by iwaeda: 7:59am On Feb 02
These people will over run West Africa countries that are complacent. I pray for Nigeria. grin angry angry angry angry
BusinessNigerians Turn To Survival Businesses As Formal Jobs Dry Up by iwaeda(op): 7:51am On Feb 02
Poor infrastructure support undermines entrepreneurship boom
• New businesses take 24% of small savings, says report
• Poor Nigerian savers prioritise Detty December over health, education


Nigeria’s deepening unemployment crisis may have triggered a dramatic shift in how millions of individuals seek to earn a living, with the majority turning to nano businesses and accidental enterprises, market insights have suggested.
On their face value, the data suggest a radical switch to entrepreneurship. But beneath are operational models that prioritise survival as opposed to serious sustainable wealth creation.

While the trend exposes the dire situation facing millions of citizens, it also points to the huge prospect in entrepreneurship and how investment in support infrastructure and fiscal incentives could power the next phase of economic growth.
The business community is replete with case studies of how survival crises pushed hundreds of Nigerians into macro-business (largely informal at takeoff) that grew into multi-billion-dollar empires.
The country may be on the cusp of an entrepreneurship breakthrough, with 24 per cent of micro savings, as suggested by a new report by MoniePoint Inc, being mobilised for investment in businesses, underpinning the rising popularity of entrepreneurship among the citizens.

At the micro level, the report suggests that N24 in every N100 saved targets a new business or the desire to expand an existing one.

Rents, which have spiked above employees’ yearly salaries as reported by The Guardian, take 16.5 per cent of savings.

Detty December, unrestricted indulgence in parties and other frivolous spending during yuletide seasons, interestingly, commands more savings than education, a key driver of productivity and wealth creation. The report puts savings for Detty December at 11 per cent and that of school fees at 10 per cent.

The data point to a silent but significant crisis that many Nigerians and even policymakers may have ignored. Considering that the report focuses more on transactions by low-income earners, with savings targets ranging from N200,000 to N500,000, it suggests that poor Nigerians are still important investments in areas such as education, rather than frivolities.

Health and education, according to economic literature, are among the strongest levellers for reducing income inequality. Sadly, health is not among the top five items Nigerians save for. However, the third item and possibly another header in part for health, takes nine per cent.

Poor savings for health and education among the least income earners in a country where spending in the two critical items is largely done out-of-pocket is a recipe for widening income inequality.

Whereas the poor are trapped in rent and other survivalist expenditures, an increasing number of the wealthiest Nigerians continue to send their wards to Ivy League universities. Foreign education demand, which spiked and extended to the struggling middle-class a few years ago in the height of government-lecturer face-off, was being subsidised by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through concessional foreign exchange (FX) until 2023 when the market was liberalised.

Even with the high cost of foreign education, owing to the sharp depreciation of the naira from 2023, the mania for foreign education among the rich has not eased. In the first half of 2025, data by the CBN suggested that Nigerians spent $1.4 billion on foreign education.

The figure was a 20 per cent uptick on the amount spent in the same period in 2024. From 2020 till June last year, the CBN statistics revealed that a total of $11.1 billion was spent on foreign education.

As increasingly number of children of rich families go overseas to acquire perceived more quality education and return home to take the juiciest opportunities, the system continues to malign children from poor homes, who barely complete basic schools not because they are mentally incapable but they are either financially disadvantaged or that their parents inadvertently made wrong choices – a possibility to breeds wider income inequality and worsen the poverty trade.

For the umpteenth time, Nigerians are leveraging smart saving products created by banks and fintech to save for business ventures. But their intentions could be undermined by an increasingly tough operating environment. With power shifting radically from a social service to an economic good, those in the bottom income quintile are largely priced out of the market.

For one, the band ‘A’ and ‘B’ categories are elitist in catchments and charges, a problem that is on its own fueling energy poverty and inequality. The fast-growing off-grid options are not within the reach of the poor.

Naira depreciation, for one, has triggered a localised spike in the cost of panels, batteries and inverters in the past three years. In some cases, prices have shot up by as much as 200 per cent, making an ambition to join the trail by struggling Nigerians a mere aspiration.

The government is offering a generous tax waiver for small businesses to help grow entrepreneurship. But for a sector that is overwhelmed with regulatory and market risks, stakeholders said the need to de-risk is more urgent than any other fiscal incentive.

In the face of a rising number of businesses, most business owners are barely getting along. For instance, the Informal Economy Report 2025 said half of informal businesses, which consist of 44 per cent of the businesses in the country, generate less than N20,000 daily in revenue, pointing to extremely thin margins.

The report puts the median daily revenue range between N20,000 and N50,000, while the median profit range is between N10,000 and N20,000. It added that 70 per cent of the businesses earn less than N50,000 daily.

An increasing number of young Nigerians may continue to flood the informal sector, not to build enduring businesses but to scavenge for survival income as artificial intelligence (AI) takes root across the board, a possibility that would worsen underemployment and deepen poverty.

A recent EY report claimed that 72 per cent of businesses in the country are exploring artificial intelligence (AI) to overhaul their workforce strategies, exposing the depth of disruption the technology will cause in the near future.
Recently, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Kristalina Georgieva, warned that the AI adoption wave could disrupt the job market and wipe out many entry-level positions. AI impacts on jobs are higher in developed economies, but emerging markets, including Nigeria, are not left out.

According to multiple reports, informal sector employment, especially in developing countries, offers low and unstable income, making it extremely difficult for the employees to live above the survival level and prioritise their health and education.

In Nigeria, from 2022, the informal sector contributes between 92 and 94 per cent to the total number of employed people. According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), self-employment, which is largely defined by informality, contributed a range of 84 and 88 per cent from 2022 to 2024.
Even at the medium scale level, as small profits are masked by high turnover and strong commercial activities, the perennially rising cost of doing business.

Content creation and influence marketing, projected to reach $5.3 billion last year, is reaping sufficient benefits from the shrinking formal job market. The expanding fan base of social media influencers – with 54 per cent of young Nigerians joining the digital community of at least one influencer – is a defining moment for the fast-growing market.

The number of Nigerians making businesses out of the microblogging sites is difficult to ascertain, as many do it as a ‘side hustle’. Reports estimate the number of Nigerian users on TikTok, the face of social media monetisation, at 37 million.
https://guardian.ng/featured/nigerians-turn-to-survival-businesses-as-formal-jobs-dry-up/

PoliticsRe: Travels: Presidency Spends ₦34 Billion On FOREX In Two Years by iwaeda: 7:39am On Feb 02
His supporters that can bearly feed or live will be supporting wreckless spending. Travelling for personal gains. grin grin grin grin angry
PoliticsRe: Bandits Set Fire On Church, Police Station, Kidnap Niger State Residents by iwaeda(op): 7:52pm On Feb 01
Why are they attacking Churches? grin cry cry cry cry
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Manchester City (2 - 2) On 1st February 2026 by iwaeda: 7:06pm On Feb 01
It looks like celestial is for Arsenal. 2-2. grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: Bandits Set Fire On Church, Police Station, Kidnap Niger State Residents by iwaeda(op): 4:57pm On Feb 01
Nlfpmod, this is terrible. grin grin grin
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Manchester United Vs Fulham (3 - 2) On 1st February 2026 by iwaeda(op): 4:56pm On Feb 01
Manchester United playing like Fergie days. grin grin grin grin angry
PoliticsBandits Set Fire On Church, Police Station, Kidnap Niger State Residents by iwaeda(op): 1:34pm On Feb 01
Bandits have burnt down the Divisional Police Station in Agwara town, headquarters of Agwara Local Government Area of Niger State, raiding a church and kidnapping at least five people in the community.

Sources told Daily Trust that the attackers arrived around 4am and engaged the police officers in a gun battle.

They eventually set the police station on fire, and reportedly moved to the UMC Church and some parts of the community, abducting no fewer than five people.

A resident of Agwara town, Mallam Hussaini Mohammed, told Daily Trust on the telephone that part of the church was also set ablaze.

old boy dies after falling into well
He said the attack had heightened fear in the town, forcing many residents to flee.

The spokesperson of the Niger State Police Command, SP Wasiu Abiodun, confirmed the attack, saying no life was lost.

According to him, “On 1/2/26 at about 3.40am, armed bandits invaded Agwara community, attacked the Police station where they were engaged by the tactical team on ground, used suspected dynamite to set the station ablaze, having overpowered the team.

“The terrorists later moved to UMC church in the community, burnt part of the church, proceeded to other areas and abducted about five persons whose identity is yet to be ascertained. Monitoring continues, further development will be communicated, please.”
https://dailytrust.com/breaking-bandits-set-fire-on-church-police-station-abduct-niger-residents/#google_vignette

PoliticsMalnutrition Looms As Funding Cuts Deepen Hunger Among Nigerians by iwaeda(op): 8:22am On Feb 01
Nigeria is facing an imminent malnutrition crisis as funding cuts to health and nutrition interventions could deepen hunger among many citizens, especially children and pregnant women, public health and food experts have warned.

They said the funding reductions were coming at a time when economic hardship, insecurity, and displacement had already weakened households’ ability to cope, particularly in the northern parts of the country.

They further noted that critical nutrition programmes have already been suspended, clinics closed, and food assistance drastically reduced, leaving millions of vulnerable children without access to lifesaving treatments for acute malnutrition.

In exclusive interviews with PUNCH Healthwise, the health and food experts stated that the combination of funding cuts and economic pressures would increase the burden of malnutrition in both the short and long term, leading to increased school absenteeism and complications among children and pregnant women, respectively.

PUNCH Healthwise recently reported the United Nations World Food Programme warning that humanitarian aid cuts would push the country deeper into a hunger emergency, noting that food assistance has fallen from 1.3 million people reached during the 2025 lean season to just 72,000 expected to be assisted in February.

The WFP noted that funding shortfalls in 2025 forced it to scale down nutrition programmes in Nigeria, which affected over 300,000 children.

Consequently, malnutrition levels in several northern states have deteriorated from “serious” to “critical”, highlighting the rapid reversal of humanitarian gains.

Also, the United Nations, through its Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Nigeria, last week disclosed that 35 million Nigerians are at risk of acute hunger this year.

A statement by the Head of Public Information, UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Nigeria, Ann Weru, showed that this was contained in the body’s 2026 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan for Nigeria.

“Nearly 35 million Nigerians are also likely to face acute food insecurity during the 2026 lean season – 5.8 million of them in the BAY States.

“The 2026 Nigeria HNRP also highlights a transition to nationally-led and resourced humanitarian action, with the gradual phasing out of international support amid the global decline in humanitarian funding,” it stated.

The United States Government slashed its foreign aid budgets soon after Donald Trump took office on January 20 as the 47th US president. The funding cuts affected the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, PEPFAR, and Tuberculosis and malaria programmes, as well as efforts to reduce maternal and neonatal deaths in the country.

The World Health Organisation and UN noted that the funding crisis threatened global efforts against ending infectious diseases, outbreak detection, and reversing progress made in reducing maternal deaths, and has disrupted the health service of several countries.

Despite increased funding by the Federal Government to areas such as HIV/AIDS, the funding cut is still affecting the availability of lifesaving materials across the country.

Already, about two million Nigerian children suffer from severe acute malnutrition, with only two out of every 10 children affected reached with treatment.

According to the United Nations Children’s Fund, seven per cent of women of childbearing age suffer from acute malnutrition.

UNICEF says malnutrition is a direct or underlying cause of 45 per cent of all deaths of children under five.

Commenting on the matter, a Professor of Public Health at the University of Ilorin, Tanimola Akande, stated that funding cuts are coming at a time when the funds are most needed due to economic stress and conflicts, particularly in Northern Nigeria.


He said donor-funded nutrition interventions had been drastically reduced due to funding cuts, leading to fewer children being reached and the possible closure of nutrition clinics.

Akande, a former president of the Association of Public Health Physicians of Nigeria, said, “Funding cuts in health and humanitarian programmes are coming at a time when these funds are most needed. This is in view of economic stress and conflicts in Nigeria, particularly in Northern Nigeria. With cuts in funding, the various nutrition intervention programmes funded by donors have reduced drastically.”

He added that the reduction in funding would have grave consequences for children under five, who he described as the most vulnerable group.

“The number of children that will be reached with nutrition programmes has reduced so much, and many more nutrition clinics will be closed if the cuts in funding persist. This will ultimately result in increased deaths among the most vulnerable children. In addition, stunting and wasting are rapidly on the increase,” Akande said.

The consultant public health physician said rising hunger and malnutrition would first be reflected in increasing cases of wasting and child deaths in health facilities and communities, as well as deaths from diseases that occur as complications of malnutrition.

He noted that the combination of funding cuts and economic pressures would increase the burden of malnutrition in both the short and long term.

“The social consequences of increased cases of malnutrition among children and pregnant women include further poverty, as little money available to the families is used for the treatment of these children. It can also cause absenteeism from school and school drop-outs,” Akande said.

He warned that malnourished pregnant women were more likely to experience complications, contribute to maternal deaths and deliver preterm or low birth weight babies.

Akande urged governments at all levels to urgently close the funding gap by allocating more resources to nutrition intervention programmes, providing food to vulnerable populations in affected states, intensifying health education on nutrition and family planning, promoting poverty alleviation programmes, and investing more in agriculture through large-scale farming.

Also, the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Consumer Advocacy for Food Safety and Nutrition Initiative, Prof Olugbenga Ogunmoyela, confirmed that the country was going to experience a significant surge in malnutrition due to funding cuts to health and nutrition interventions.


Prof Olugbenga Ogunmoyela
He said the situation was worsened by the removal of the petroleum subsidy, naira devaluation, and rising electricity tariffs, which had increased the burden on families since 2023.

“There is no doubt that Nigeria is likely to experience a significant surge in malnutrition because of funding cuts to health and nutrition interventions. Global funding reductions have already led to the suspension of critical nutrition programmes, clinic closures, and sharp declines in food and nutrition assistance,” Ogunmoyela said.

He noted that lifesaving treatment for acute malnutrition was being threatened as humanitarian funding faced nearly a one billion dollar shortfall.

The CAFSANI president added that food assistance had dropped drastically, nutrition resources were exhausted, and over 150 donor-supported clinics were at risk of closure, further worsening hunger and malnutrition outcomes amid high food inflation and insecurity.

Ogunmoyela explained that funding cuts directly increased malnutrition rates by disrupting lifesaving nutrition services, causing shortages of drugs, supplements and Ready to Use Therapeutic Food, and weakening recovery outcomes.

He said reduced funding had also limited food assistance, with the World Food Programme reportedly able to reach only about 72,000 people in early 2026, compared with 1.3 million people during the 2025 lean season.

“As assistance declines, households are forced to resort to harmful coping strategies such as skipping meals or selling productive assets, accelerating the progression to severe malnutrition,” he said.

Ogunmoyela identified children under five, internally displaced persons, pregnant and breastfeeding women, smallholder farmers in conflict-affected areas and urban poor households as those most at risk.

He warned that early warning signs of worsening malnutrition would include rising admissions for severe acute malnutrition, frequent stockouts of nutrition commodities, increased under-five mortality, sustained high food prices, and worsening displacement and insecurity.

He noted that long-term impacts would include irreversible cognitive and physical damage in children, deepening poverty, and increased financial burden on the government.

“Increased cases of malnutrition in Nigeria have severe health and social consequences, particularly for children and pregnant women. Chronic malnutrition causes stunting, permanently impairing brain development and cognitive function, while weakened immunity increases the risk of death from common illnesses,” Ogunmoyela said.

The food expert added that maternal malnutrition increased the risk of preterm birth, obstetric complications, and maternal mortality, while socially, malnutrition reduced school attendance, learning outcomes, and long-term productivity, costing the country significant economic losses.

On solutions, Ogunmoyela called for immediate relief measures and long-term reforms, including improved security to allow farmers to return to their farms, release of grains from strategic reserves, expansion of food assistance programmes, increased domestic financing and investment in agriculture, infrastructure, and post-harvest storage.

Addressing the paradox of reported food price reductions amid poor affordability, he pointed out that declining purchasing power, high transport costs, and widespread poverty were to blame.

“The way out requires restoring purchasing power and investing in long-term food system reforms. Improving security in food-producing areas, transport infrastructure, and support for smallholder farmers are critical to ensuring affordable and reliable food access,” Ogunmoyela said.

https://healthwise.punchng.com/malnutrition-looms-as-funding-cuts-deepen-hunger-among-nigerians/
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Chelsea Vs West Ham (3 - 2) On 31st January 2026 by iwaeda(op): 7:11pm On Jan 31
Edoblakky:
This coach without sense decided to bench James and cucurella while playing garnacho and gittens at the same time.
He wants to play Arsenal in the carabao Cup. grin grin angry grin
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Chelsea Vs West Ham (3 - 2) On 31st January 2026 by iwaeda(op): 7:10pm On Jan 31
Summerville 2-0 West Ham. grin grin grin grin
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Chelsea Vs West Ham (3 - 2) On 31st January 2026 by iwaeda(op): 6:50pm On Jan 31
Jared Brown for West Ham. grin grin grin grin angry
PoliticsRe: Okpebholo Orders LG Chairmen To Erect 360 Campaign Billboards For Tinubu’s Re-el by iwaeda: 2:58pm On Jan 31
Governor of insecurity. Wasting tax players to erect billboards for FAILURE. This money will fix Auchi-Benin, by pass. grin grin grin angry
PoliticsRe: Bandits Attack Zamfara Community, Burn Four Villagers To Death Over Refusal by iwaeda(op): 2:24pm On Jan 31
All these killings are not defended, just because some people want 2027. grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsBandits Attack Zamfara Community, Burn Four Villagers To Death Over Refusal by iwaeda(op): 11:21am On Jan 31
The bandits reportedly set several houses ablaze, burning victims alive.

At least four residents of Gwargwaba village in the Nahuce District of Bungudu Local Government Area, Zamfara State, were killed on Thursday evening after terrorists suspected to be bandits attacked the community.



The bandits reportedly set several houses ablaze, burning victims alive.

SaharaReporters gathered that the attack occurred around 6pm when heavily armed attackers stormed the village.

Confirming the incident on Saturday, a security alert platform, Bakatsine, disclosed that four villagers were burned to death inside their homes during the raid.

The attackers also set several houses, food storage facilities and livestock on fire, leaving widespread destruction in their wake.

According to the report, the assault followed the community’s refusal to comply with illegal levies imposed by the armed group, a practice that has become common in many rural communities across Zamfara and other parts of northwestern Nigeria.

Bakatsine, while condemning the incident, raised concerns over the growing pattern of violence linked to extortion by bandits, asking how long rural communities would continue to suffer deadly attacks simply for rejecting unlawful taxes enforced at gunpoint.

Zamfara State has remained one of the epicentres of banditry in Nigeria, with repeated attacks on villages, mass kidnappings, killings and destruction of property, despite ongoing military operations in the region.



https://saharareporters.com/2026/01/31/bandits-attack-zamfara-community-burn-four-villagers-death-over-refusal-pay-illegal

PoliticsRe: Bus Carrying Passengers To Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo's Burial Crashes, 10 Dead by iwaeda(op): 11:14pm On Jan 30
Thank God, I spread good news, not just bad one. grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: Kidnapped Nigerians Left To Die As Poverty Cuts Off Means To Pay Ransom by iwaeda: 10:15pm On Jan 30
APC has come to steal, to kill and destroy. People are now doing gofundme to pay ransome. grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: 25 Killed In Nigeria's Deadliest Reported Islamist Attack Since US... Reuters by iwaeda(op):
Nlfpmod,Something they will first denied, Reuters broke this. Truth can't be silenced. Nigeria shall be saved. grin grin grin grin grin grin
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Manchester United Vs Fulham (3 - 2) On 1st February 2026 by iwaeda(op): 8:53pm On Jan 30
Manchester United vs Fulham 01 February, 2026 15:00 pm.
PoliticsRe: Reps Pass ₦58.47 Trillion 2026 Budget by iwaeda: 7:11pm On Jan 30
Something that will not be used, 2024 budgets still in progress. APC really brought us backwards. grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: Bus Carrying Passengers To Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo's Burial Crashes, 10 Dead by iwaeda(op): 6:44pm On Jan 30
Thank God Nlfpmod, only two people, may God comfort their families. cry cry
Politics25 Killed In Nigeria's Deadliest Reported Islamist Attack Since US... Reuters by iwaeda(op): 6:38pm On Jan 30
25 killed in Nigeria's deadliest reported Islamist attack since US Christmas strikes

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Jan 30 (Reuters) - At least 25 people were killed when suspected Boko Haram militants attacked a town in northern Nigeria, relatives of victims said, the deadliest reported Islamist attack since U.S. President Donald Trump ordered air strikes on Christmas Day.

The victims were labourers who had travelled to Sabon Gari town in northeastern Nigeria's Borno State to work at a construction site, when gunmen swept in on Thursday and opened fire, relatives Hassan Usman and Auwal Isa told Reuters.

Aliyu Ndume, a senator who represents the region, said he was "shocked and saddened" by the killing of his constituents.

In a separate militant attack, also on Thursday in Borno, at least nine soldiers and two members of a civilian task force assisting them were killed by fighters who launched a pre-dawn assault on an army base. Sixteen people were wounded.

Borno, where Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) fighters have intensified attacks on military convoys and civilians, remains the epicentre of the 17-year Islamist insurgency.

Nigeria, plagued by Islamist attacks and mass kidnappings, is under additional pressure to restore security since Trump accused it last year of failing to protect Christians. U.S. forces struck what they described as terrorist targets on December 25. The Nigerian authorities say they are cooperating with Washington to improve security.
https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/25-killed-nigerias-deadliest-reported-islamist-attack-since-us-christmas-strikes-2026-01-30/

PoliticsRe: PDP: Court Nullifies National Convention in Ibadan, Turaki & Wike Factions React by iwaeda: 5:36pm On Jan 30
Wike only last hope, but Turaki's faction will prevail. Anyways, Tinubu is not beyond 2027 despite all these attics. grin grin grin angry angry
PoliticsRe: Rivers :fresh Crisis Looms As Wike Dare To Overwrite Fubara In Event Of Him Refu by iwaeda: 5:07pm On Jan 30
Fubara will contest again, Wike is doomed to to be lost with APC soon. grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: VIDEO: Rain Floods Lagos Road, Causes Gridlock by iwaeda: 5:05pm On Jan 30
We are on top of it, we shall clear your drainage later.
Government has no will to enforce environmental laws, only selective actions.
grin grin grin grin grin grin
PropertiesRe: Finally Moved Into My First Rented House At The Age Of 46 by iwaeda: 5:01pm On Jan 30
Thank God you can rent a house in this Tinubu economy. grin angry angry angry angry
PoliticsRe: We’re Being Denied Education Because Of Where We Were Born’ by iwaeda: 4:33pm On Jan 30
Almost all major schools in Kwara South has been shut, yet Absentee governor careless. Otoogee will be loud, people can't farm or sleep peacefully. Tinubu and APC don't even bother, but some louts still promoting him. grin grin grin grin grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: FG To Raise Excise Duties On Alcohol, Tobacco, Other Sin Goods In Major Tax, Rev by iwaeda: 2:11pm On Jan 30
This one will affect Road and NURTW more than anybody. Why are they sin goods? grin grin grin angry angry
PoliticsRe: Bus Carrying Passengers To Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo's Burial Crashes, 10 Dead by iwaeda(op): 1:40pm On Jan 30
I just remembered Agagu. These people are too deep. Awon omo Yoruba ma understand.Some of the drivers over speed and caused evil. Do good, no one knows the last day. cry cry cry cry cry
PoliticsRe: Ikot Ekpene-Aba-Owerri Road Rehabilitation and Dualization Project (Video) by iwaeda: 1:39pm On Jan 30
Jayhome24:
E dey pain you cus what you want you are not seen it and you can never see it. Dey here dey shout propaganda na so una talj about Lagos Calabar coatal road at the end, December 2025 na una carry moto go the road cause traffic jam. Rest ok.
Coastal road that has not crossed Ogun. A project without bidding on any due process. Tinubu is not beyond 2027. angry grin angry angry grin

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