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Biodun Coker Foundation Set to Graduate 8th Set of Students — A Legacy of Impact and Service https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSSpKoWyX/ On Saturday, 16th August 2025, at exactly 10:00 am, the Biodun Coker Foundation will proudly graduate its 8th set of students from the Lagos Island Information Technology Program. This milestone is more than just another graduation — it is the continuation of a story rooted in vision, service, and an unwavering commitment to community development. The Foundation’s journey began when Biodun Coker (FCCA), a Chartered Accountant with his own accountancy firm in both London and Nigeria, considered vying for the position of Lagos Island Local Government Chairman. In a meeting with grassroots politicians, he sought advice on how to put his name out there before officially declaring his intention to run. Suggestions poured in — from distributing GCE forms to sharing “stomach infrastructure” like 3 bags of rice per ward. After listening, Biodun Coker made it clear: if he was going to do anything, it must be impactful and leave a legacy that would outlive him. He ended the meeting, but around 3 a.m., called the team leader to assemble a group of young minds to develop a proposal for an ICT program under the Biodun Coker Foundation. Within five weeks, the 7-man team created a robust curriculum for advanced ICT courses like DevOps, SQL, Power BI, and Networking. But on the day of the presentation, Biodun Coker surprised everyone. He asked for the soft copy, and then shredded the printed proposal before their eyes. His reason? Those advanced courses were best suited for university graduates with prior experience. He wanted something that would benefit people at the lowest level of society — something that would truly lay a foundation for the vulnerable. That same day, he appointed Mr. Adeleke Azeez Olalekan, a first-class graduate and project manager, as the Director of the Foundation. Soon after, the Foundation launched with 30 desks to train 30 students in morning, afternoon, and evening sessions over 8-week cycles. Since inception, the Biodun Coker Foundation has: • Graduated over 700 students from its ICT program. • Conducted special community trainings on development, ethical leadership, and security management. • Trained 1,000 JAMB candidates in Lagos Island on CBT. • Launched the Lagos Island Wellness Initiative (LIWI), distributing 1,000 Ilera Eko HMO policies to residents. • Donated a fully equipped ICT center to Edward Blyden Memorial School in honor of their top-performing student, Master Abdulahi Taiwo, the best in the Eko Excel common entrance exams. • Donated ₦2 million to Master Abdulahi Taiwo and organized the “Train Ride with Biodun Coker” excursion for students and staff of Edward Blyden Memorial School. As the Foundation prepares to celebrate its 8th graduation ceremony, it continues to set an example of what it means to serve with purpose and impact. We invite the people of Lagos Island to join us on this special day and to keep supporting the Biodun Coker Foundation in prayers and goodwill, as we work together for a better society. |
https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1Zv3DjwBBQ/?mibextid=wwXIfr 📰 Mamcoker Decode Special Dan Ulasi Must Resign: The Hypocrisy Has Been Televised On August 5, 2025, while appearing on Arise TV’s Morning Show, veteran PDP chieftain Mr. Dan Ulasi challenged anchor Rufai Oseni in a moment of rare political theatre that quickly spiraled into a personal credibility crisis. In his own words, Dan Ulasi declared: “What you are saying is fallacy of generalization. I have never condemned Peter Obi’s governorship in Anambra State. If you present that fact, I will resign today from political process. I never condemned Peter Obi.” It was a bold claim. But the facts have now caught up with him — in full HD clarity. ⸻ 🎥 THE VIDEO DOESN’T LIE A 9-year-old clip from Channels TV’s Sunrise Daily has emerged — and it is damning. In that video, a much younger Dan Ulasi did exactly what he swore he never did: He condemned the Peter Obi administration in Anambra State — not once, not vaguely, but directly and emphatically. He criticized Obi’s governance style, questioned his policies, and cast doubts on his leadership. This was no passing comment; it was a full-on political takedown. Dan Ulasi lied on national television, and not just about another politician — he lied about his own record, in the same breath that he questioned the integrity of others. ⸻ 🧠 The Real Fallacy: Ulasi’s Moral Grandstanding In the same Arise TV appearance, Ulasi painted a picture of Nigerian politicians as lacking integrity, character, and honesty. But he has now shown himself to be a textbook case of the very moral deficiencies he claimed to despise. While trying to appear as a principled elder statesman, he instead revealed himself to be the king of the contradictions — comfortably rewriting his own history on live TV, and daring anyone to challenge him. Well, Mamcoker Decode accepts that challenge — and meets it with facts. ⸻ 📌 Peter Obi, by the Record Ironically, the man Dan Ulasi tried to erase his past criticism of — Peter Obi — continues to stand on a record that even critics struggle to malign. As Ulasi himself admitted, without hesitation, on Arise TV: “Peter, by all standards of Nigerian politics, is a very honest person… a good Christian who doesn’t speak from both sides of his mouth.” “Peter Obi, from his record as Anambra State governor, is honest and has integrity… Every reference on him is positive.” “Peter is a viable product — any party that has him will enjoy some level of advantage as a reference point in this country.” These are strong words — and Mamcoker Decode agrees with them. But the real issue isn’t Obi’s integrity — it’s Ulasi’s betrayal of his own word #DanUlasiMustResign #PoliticalAccountability #SayNoToLies #ExposedOnTV #IntegrityCrisis #PoliticalHypocrisy #CaughtInALie #NoToDoubleStandards #PublicTrustMatters #NigerianPoliticsDecoded #AriseTV #RufaiOseni #SunriseDaily #ChannelsTV #VideoEvidence #TVArchivesDon’tLie #ReceiptsReady #PeterObi #ObidientMovement #PDPCrisis #OppositionWatch #2027Politics #PeterObiRecord #PeterObiFacts #PoliticalCredibilityTest #MamcokerDecode #DecodedByMamcoker #MamcokerInvestigates #TruthIsPolitical #DecodeTheLies #PoliticalReceipts |
🧩 Mamcoker Decode: The Power of a Promise — And the Price of Breaking It In the history of Nigeria’s Fourth Republic, only one sitting president has ever been unseated: Goodluck Jonathan in 2015. And that historic defeat was made possible not just by opposition strength, but by a broken promise. In 2011, as a southern president ascending after the death of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, Goodluck Jonathan reportedly assured PDP governors and northern stakeholders that he would serve only one full term, to maintain national balance and respect the party’s zoning arrangement. But in 2015, after securing a Supreme Court judgment that cleared the legal hurdle, Jonathan reneged on that political understanding and declared his intention to run again. The fallout was swift and far-reaching. ⚠️ The North Felt Betrayed To the political North, it wasn’t just a campaign — it was a breach of trust. What followed was unprecedented: • Five sitting PDP governors defected. • Key northern political heavyweights united with former rivals. • A grand coalition was born — the APC merger. And in 2015, for the first time in Nigerian history, a sitting president was defeated at the ballot box. That victory wasn’t just about Buhari or APC. It was about a united political north, fired up by a shared sense of betrayal and a strategic opportunity. ⸻ 🧭 2025 Echoes the Past: Southern Aspirants Making the Same Promise Fast-forward to 2025, and once again, Southern presidential hopefuls are promising to serve just one term — all in an effort to appease the North and win its endorsement. Some echo the Jonathan playbook with phrases like: “I will hand over to the North after four years.” “My tenure is just a bridge, not a power grab.” These pledges sound noble, but Nigerians — especially the North — remember 2015. They remember how a southern promise was broken. They remember the anger, the mobilization, and the merger. ⸻ 🧠 What Does This Mean Today? ✍️ 1. Promises Aren’t Just Politics — They’re Triggers Jonathan’s case proves that a promise made to a political bloc — especially the North — carries real weight. Breaking it doesn’t just cost goodwill. It can cost power. 🔄 2. One-Term Offers Are a Strategy, Not Sacrifice Today’s aspirants offering one term aren’t necessarily acting selflessly. They’re using a tactical promise to gain regional acceptance — especially from a zone that still believes it is owed. ⚔️ 3. If History Repeats, the Coalition Will Return If any future president breaks this emerging “single-term handshake,” the backlash could be even more coordinated than in 2015. Because this time, the lesson is fresh, and the precedent already set. ⸻ 🧨 Final Decode: Mamcoker Decode warns: When a Southern candidate promises “only one term,” it is not merely a concession — it is a ticking political timer. And if broken again, the result may not just be defeat, but a repeat of 2015: when the North turned unity into overthrow. ⸻ 📢 Decode Nigeria, One Lie at a Time. #MamcokerDecode #OneTermPolitics #2015Repeat #ZoningMatters #JonathanPromise #PoliticalMerger #PowerShiftDecode |
By Mamcoker Decode As the 2027 general election inches closer, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) must come to a difficult, yet honest conclusion: this is not the time to pursue the presidency at all costs — it is the time to fight for political survival. The 2023 elections marked a brutal reality for the PDP — a party once dominant, now fighting to remain Nigeria’s credible second force, even as smaller parties like the ADC and LP (Labour Party) chip away at its base. Rather than enter 2027 with a delusion of grandeur, PDP must recalibrate its objectives: retain its national relevance, secure its National Assembly seats, hold governorships, and preserve the party structure — even if it means not fielding a presidential candidate. ⸻ 🎯 First Step: Stop Competing, Start Aligning PDP must accept that it cannot defeat both Bola Tinubu and Peter Obi in 2027. Its best chance lies in strategic adoption, not competition. Option 1: Adopt Peter Obi This is the most realistic and beneficial path for the PDP, and here’s why: • 🧬 Peter Obi has PDP DNA – He was Atiku Abubakar’s running mate in 2019 and has deep ties to the party’s ideology and structures. An adoption doesn’t feel like betrayal — it feels like reconciliation. • 🌍 Massive Southern Base – Obi can deliver nearly 50% of southern votes, especially with PDP’s help in Delta, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, and Bayelsa. With Northern Christian and Middle Belt support, Obi becomes a competitive opposition force. • 🧱 PDP Retains Its Identity – Aligning with Obi allows PDP to remain the leading opposition. They don’t disappear like they would under Tinubu. Option 2: Support Bola Tinubu Tempting, yes. Strategic? No. Here’s why: • 🎭 Adopting an APC President Makes PDP Invisible – It blurs the line between PDP and APC. And since elections are held on the same day, uninformed voters may vote APC down the ballot, costing PDP Senate, House of Reps, and even governorship seats. • 📉 Weakens Internal Morale – Asking PDP loyalists to back the man who defeated them in 2023 will create confusion and resentment within the ranks. Many might defect or go silent. ⸻ 🤝 Let Wike Have His Cake — If That Keeps the Party Alive The elephant in PDP’s room is the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike. Let’s be honest: he’s not going anywhere. Rather than fight him endlessly, PDP must find a middle ground: • Allow Wike the freedom to support Tinubu (if he chooses), especially in the presidential race. • In return, demand loyalty from him in governorship, state assembly, and National Assembly contests where PDP has a stronghold. • Compromising with Wike is not a betrayal of principle — it’s survival instinct. Trying to expel or silence him might fracture the party entirely and accelerate PDP’s descent into irrelevance. 🔮 Final Thought: PDP must remember that in politics, losing smart is better than losing hard. Not every election must be contested to win — some must be strategically surrendered to preserve the party’s core for future battles. 2027 is not about pride. It’s about positioning. If PDP adopts Peter Obi and realigns its ambitions, it lives to fight another day — stronger, leaner, and smarter. Mamcoker Decode will keep watching.
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Lagos LG Elections: A Mock Election for APC or a True Test of Political Grounding? By Mamcoker Decode Date: July 7, 2025 With just five days to the Local Government and Area Council Elections in Lagos State, what should be a defining moment for democracy in Nigeria’s most politically significant state is beginning to look like a mock election for the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). While the APC is poised to “clear all the seats”, as has been the tradition in past local polls, the real question is not whether they win — but what winning really means in today’s context. In a post-2023 Nigeria, where Labour Party (LP) delivered a shocking upset in Lagos during the presidential election, defeating the APC’s well-oiled political machine, this local election should have served as a litmus test of APC’s ground game since that embarrassment. But as it stands, the party doesn’t look hungry. ⸻ Post-2023: What Has Changed? The 2023 general elections sent a powerful message — Lagos is no longer politically predictable. The emergence of LP in key areas like Eti-Osa, Surulere, Amuwo-Odofin, and parts of Ikeja was a wake-up call. The youth, the urban elite, the non-Yoruba communities, and a large number of first-time voters spoke loudly — and APC nearly got drowned in the noise. So now, two years later, with another opportunity to test its strength at the grassroots, the APC should be fighting for validation, not just victory. This election is not just about councils and chairmanships — it’s a referendum on: • How well has the APC healed internal wounds? • How many aggrieved demographics have they touched? • Have the youth who felt excluded in 2023 been brought in? • Has the party truly reconnected with the urban elite and professionals? • Have ethnic minorities in Lagos been given a place beyond tokenism? ⸻ The Problem: A Lack of Urgency With only five days to the elections, the campaign has been visibly flat. There’s no energy, no buzz, no creative engagement with the public. The party’s traditional rally formula seems stuck in time — same faces, same meetings, same assumptions. This is dangerous. Clearing all the seats with a low turnout, minimal youth participation, and zero elite engagement only paints the illusion of dominance. It’s winning on paper but losing in perception. If turnout is driven only by loyal structures and not broad-based excitement, then it’s not victory — it’s inertia. ⸻ What Should Be Measured Beyond the Ballot Winning all 57 councils and chairmanships will be meaningless if APC refuses to analyze deeper metrics, including: • Youth turnout rates — Are we inspiring the next generation or sidelining them? • Ethnic participation — Beyond Igbos and Hausas at ward meetings, did we genuinely include them in candidacy and strategy? • Voter enthusiasm among professionals and the middle class — Did they even know there was an election? • Public sentiment in LP-dominated zones — Have we reclaimed lost ground or merely ignored it? • Ward-by-ward variation — Are there silent protest votes we are not seeing? These are the real political indicators. Without them, “clearing all the seats” is nothing but political vanity. ⸻ Conclusion: APC Must Wake Up The APC Lagos chapter is playing too safe, and that’s a dangerous position to be in a state that shocked the country in 2023. Local government elections are supposed to be the most relatable level of politics — this is where people feel governance directly. If APC cannot excite Lagosians at this level, how can it claim legitimacy going forward? The party must understand that this is not just a vote — it’s a mirror. If that mirror reflects voter apathy, demographic fatigue, and elite detachment, then even a 57-0 win would be a hollow victory. The APC must not mistake uncontested elections for uncontested popularity. ⸻ #MamcokerDecode #LagosElections #APCLagos #LocalGovernmentElection #YouthParticipation #PoliticalEngagement #2023Reflections #MockElectionOrTest #NigerianDemocracy |
https://www.facebook.com/share/1SgSCNNuNb/?mibextid=wwXIfr Olubadan Succession: As Oba Olakulehin Passes, Spotlight Turns to Rashidi Ladoja—But Is It Time to Review the Tradition? By Mamcoker Decode Date: July 7, 2025 The city of Ibadan mourns yet again as news broke of the passing of the 43rd Olubadan, Oba Owolabi Olakulehin, who died barely two days after celebrating his 90th birthday, and just under a year after his coronation in July 2024. His brief reign followed the passing of Oba Lekan Balogun, who died in March 2024. In line with tradition, all eyes now turn to High Chief Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja, former governor of Oyo State and the most senior chief in the Egbe Agba (civil) line, who is expected to ascend the throne as the next Olubadan of Ibadanland. The Olubadan succession system, perhaps the most orderly and peaceful in Nigeria, operates on a unique hierarchical ladder that alternates between two ruling lines: the Egbe Agba (civil) and Balogun (military). With each death, succession is largely predictable, avoiding the sort of chieftaincy tussles common in many Nigerian kingdoms. Rashidi Ladoja, who served as Governor of Oyo State from 2003 to 2007 and later became a senator, has long been a key figure in both politics and Ibadan’s traditional hierarchy. He was formally crowned Otun Olubadan in August 2024, ending years of uncertainty and political resistance regarding the reform of the Olubadan chieftaincy declaration. Ladoja’s ascension, like those before him, is expected to proceed without contest. His previous statements highlight his belief in the unity and self-regulating strength of the Ibadan traditional council: “We can do our things on our own in Ibadanland… Those thinking that Ibadan will burn are liars… Only those that God destined can become the Olubadan.” But as the city prepares for yet another transition, a pressing question emerges—should the Olubadan succession model be reviewed? Despite its orderliness, the system increasingly results in the installation of monarchs well above the age of 80 in a country where average life expectancy hovers below 70. It has become a norm—almost an expectation—for Nigerians to hear of the death of an Olubadan shortly after installation, and the cycle continues with little or no room for younger, more active leadership at the apex of Ibadan’s traditional institution. There is no doubt that experience and seniority remain core pillars of Yoruba culture, and the traditional steps leading to the Olubadan stool are deeply respected. However, the current model needs a pragmatic review, not to erase tradition, but to evolve with the times. A modern city like Ibadan deserves a monarch who is not just revered but also energetic and capable of engaging the demands of both tradition and contemporary governance. Rashidi Ladoja is, without doubt, a statesman and elder with immense experience. But this moment must also spark a broader conversation about the future of traditional rulership in Nigeria, particularly in Ibadan where the pyramid of succession is transparent yet rigid. Until then, Ibadan prepares to crown its next king, and once again, the people will offer prayers—not just for wisdom, but for long life. ⸻ #Olubadan #Ibadan #RashidiLadoja #MamcokerDecode #TraditionalLeadership #NigeriaMonarchy #OyoState #ObaOlakulehin #YorubaCulture |
May be he’s no more into Generator business |
Hh |
Sultty:Sorry for late response bro. Pls Send your number to mamcoker@gmail.com |
Sultty:Bring 3m and it’s urs |
wonda26:Am sorry dat I dint return here, my plan is to use it as side hussle . I got a ford transit 2002 long chassis , high roof. It was converted from right to left. I did the papers but never used the vehicle once. I am yet to even put the plate number. I have lots of engagement that takes my time. And I don’t want to start a business that I wound be able to monitor. I might sell the van in the long run |
topsy23:Thanks |
Need a structural engineer |
Gshdh |
Need a relocation miniflat at Ikeja GRA with appliances |
mamcoker:. This is to tell you all that I will have to sell the van as the initial contract we were expecting is taking ages and its difficult getting another one. |
Shawl001:. If the person that planted it has been coming to my compound to clean the dirts created by the leaves, I will release the banana. If I can claim the liability, will also claim the benefits |
Nnn |
I have a farm for sale at Tigbori around Ogbere at ogun state for sale. I am selling because I can't monitor the farm. I cleared it 5 months ago. I prunned over 50 palm trees and planted 30 dozens of plantain. I have videos that can't be uploaded here. It's available for 2m. Contact me at o8o22o95335 |
suco01:Buzzed u on WhatsApp |
temi4fash:I replied you with my phone nos but admin banned me and deleted my post. Our bus is available to carry anything. Contact me at mamcoker@yahoo dot com
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temi4fash:
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Kasdat5:Finally Got this, will give account of progress to encourage others as you guys did to me
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What a lovely angle. Really appreciate sotech: |
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Hi, can anyone tell me how long it takes to get the appointment email for physical submission. I have submitted online and uploaded the signed delivery receipt. |
Blissbush:https://ec-lagos.itamaraty.gov.br/process?id=62d6c19a78d2490014ac329a |