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Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by KEVIND: 8:00am On Oct 08, 2022
Several weeks ago, my 80-year-old paternal uncle, who is a community leader, called me to ask whom between Atiku Abubakar and Bola Tinubu he should vote and canvass support for. That was a strange request considering that in 2019 he resisted my entreaty to him to not vote or campaign for Buhari because of the danger that a Buhari second term would pose for Nigeria.

He apparently sensed that I was hesitant to make any recommendations because the last time I did he balked. He was a true believer in Buhari even when overwhelming evidence had shown that Buhari wasn’t whom he had claimed to be. In response to my hesitation, he said he was asking because all I had told him about Buhari had materialized.

If I was right about Buhari, I might be right about the next president, he said. I don’t think that is accurate. I have no crystal ball to gaze at the future. I only predicted Buhari’s ongoing presidential disaster based on what was already happening, which his supporters like my uncle wore blinders over.

Anyway, I asked my uncle why he limited his choices to Tinubu and Atiku. He said it was because they were the only serious contenders in the race and that he had a hard time choosing between them.

I asked if he had heard of Peter Obi. He hadn’t. Not even remotely. And my uncle isn’t some uneducated, rural bumpkin. Although he lives in the countryside in retirement, he is a UK-trained medical professional who is politically active. At his request, I told him about Obi and said Obi’s name gets mentioned along with Tinubu and Atiku in urban Nigeria.

Like a typical Muslim northern Nigerian, he couldn’t get past the anxieties about an Igbo president throwing Nigeria into turmoil by using the instruments of federal power to declare Biafra, particularly in light of the recrudescence of Biafra movements and the mainstreaming of neo-Biafra sentiments in the Southeast.

I politely told him that he had his anxieties mixed up. The resurgence of Biafra movements and neo-Biafra sentiments in Igboland is the consequence of the feelings of exclusion from the center among the Igbo people. Electing an Igbo person as president would eliminate Biafranism—or push it to the fringes.

Given the wide geographic spread of Igbo people in Nigeria, I said, it isn’t reasonable to say that they don’t want to be in Nigeria. An insular, inward-looking people who resent the diversity of Nigeria and want to recoil into their own geo-cultural enclave would live only in their region.

Our conversation ended without any recommendations from me. Fast forward to last weekend. My uncle called to say he won’t only vote for Peter Obi but would campaign for him in the community. He said my siblings and cousins, whom he said had been influenced by my writing to become Obi supporters, had convinced him that Peter Obi was the candidate to support in the 2023 election.

(To be perfectly honest, I had not the remotest idea that my writing promotes the candidacy of Peter Obi because not a few Obi supporters have insulted me in the past over what I wrote about him. Although I’ve publicly stated my preference for an Igbo president in 2023 because I’m convinced that it’s the surest guarantee for Nigeria’s continuity as a united nation, I am entirely non-partisan in this election cycle.)

I’m bringing my uncle’s story because it exemplifies a trend I’ve been observing in the last few weeks. Although there is still a lot of indifference to—and, in some cases, resentment at—Peter Obi in the Muslim north, I am sensing a progressive acceptance of his candidacy.

Another person I spoke with from Kano who says he is now warming up to Obi told me several people he knows and interacts with in the Northwest are giving Obi a chance both because of the growing intensity of the hurt Buhari has inflicted on people in the region and the fact that the alternatives to Obi seem like Buhari.

Tinubu’s health scares, frequent medical trips to London, and struggles with communicating with the public are disturbingly redolent of Buhari. And although Atiku seems healthy and is evidently the most prepared presidential candidate, he is Buhari’s contemporary. So, his age counts against him, not to mention 2023 is the year for a southern president—as 2015 and 2019 were for a northern president.

I don’t think the easing of the apathy— and hostility— to Obi in the Muslim North will be sufficient to cause him to win the plurality of votes there, but it may get him surprisingly higher votes than most people are inclined to expect. Of course, in electoral politics predictions often have no more than a one-week validity, and this is particularly true of the 2023 presidential election.

There are broadly five voting blocs in Nigeria: the Northern Muslim bloc (which is sometimes not based on contiguous geography and can spread across the three subdivisions of the region), the northern Christian bloc (which is also not always based on contiguous geography and can encompass a wide stretch of the region), the southwest bloc (which is entirely Yoruba and customarily unaffected by religious identification, although this is changing), the southeast (which is entirely Igbo) and the southern ethnic minority bloc.

To win a presidential election, a candidate needs to win at least four of these blocs. No candidate, for now, dominates in four voting blocs.

Bola Tinubu appears to be dominant in the Southwest, although I sense that his health challenges are chipping away at his advantage there. Many people in the region who genuinely want him to be president have worries that he may die in office and allow the North to take over power again. Well, some northern Muslims had said that of Buhari (based on what happened to Umar Musa Yar’adua), and the man seems to be on the mend and looking way healthier than he has ever been.

Atiku Abubakar seems to be the favorite among Muslims in the Northeast (except in Borno and Yobe) with a potential to expand his reach to other parts of the Muslim North. His problem is that because he has always been liberal, cosmopolitan, and not delimited by religion, he doesn’t excite northern Muslims who define their identities in religious terms.

It’s precisely why he used to be more popular in the South (and in the Christian North) than in the Muslim North. But Peter Obi has stolen his thunder in his erstwhile electoral base, and this was the basis of a joke I saw on social media that says Atiku has in the bag all the votes he needs to be president in 2023—except that Obi is holding the bag.

Obi appears to have a lock on the votes in the Southeast, the South-South, and in such predominantly Christians states as Benue, Plateau, and even Taraba. Christians in southern Kaduna and Southern Kebbi seem more favorably disposed to him than they are to any other candidate. The major challenge of his popularity in the Southeast is that it may not translate to high voter turnout in light of the continuing violence and threats of violence by IPOB.

Muslims in the North-central and the Northwest appear to be the only noncommittal, persuadable voting bloc because they have no sentimental investment in any of the three major presidential candidates. They can swing in any direction.

Because Obi is making a mark, however imperceptible, in these regions where he was previously unknown, we should recognize that he is no longer the underdog that he once was. In order to avoid a repeat of Buhari, critical citizens should ask Obi hard, soul-searching questions because he could be president.

For example, why did he allow the Anambra State University branch of ASUU to go on strike for more than six months and even going so far as to sack the school’s vice chancellor “because of his alleged romance with the striking workers of the university,” according to the Daily Sun of January 19, 2011. How is he different from Buhari in this regard?

Why did he allow doctors in Anambra State to go on strike for 13 months, which led to many needless deaths? The doctors called off their strike without Obi meeting their demands. And he implemented the no-work-no-pay rule when Anambra civil servants went on strike to demand to be paid minimum wage.

While he was governor of Anambra, he played typical Nigerian politics of divide and rule. He played Catholics against Anglicans and even stigmatized political opponents as “Yoruba” people, according to Professor Okey Ndibe who wrote extensively on him.

“It is similarly appalling that a governor who reportedly has ambitions for higher political office could not restrain himself from disparaging Mr. Ngige as a Yoruba candidate,” Ndibe wrote in his April 18, 2011, column titled “Peter Obi, Akunyili and Political Folly.” “Even if we accepted the silly argument that the ACN was a Yoruba party – so what? Is the governor allergic to forging political alliances with the Yoruba? Is he not aware that such appeals to base, ethnic sentiments would return to haunt him if he ever seeks to be a political player at the national level?”

That was prophetic. This doesn’t make Obi any worse than his opponents. But because he could be president, we should interrogate him so we won’t be blindsided.


https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2022/10/peter-obis-quiet-inroads-into-muslim.html?m=1

125 Likes 9 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Corridon: 8:00am On Oct 08, 2022
Agreed that Obi should do more awareness in the core north. We still have time for that but las las Obi remains the undisputed choice of Nigerians.

441 Likes 32 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Abdul05: 8:02am On Oct 08, 2022
Everybody knows even the outside observers know that obi the idiot is a dullard ... grin grin


Now that the idiot is out of race so let us talk about Atiku and tinubu.... grin grin

152 Likes 17 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Bontafa: 8:02am On Oct 08, 2022
E go be like Blue film to APC urchins

221 Likes 12 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 8:04am On Oct 08, 2022
Structure or no structure, a new wave of revolution is dawning.

194 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Munamoqel: 8:06am On Oct 08, 2022
KEVIND:
Several weeks ago, my 80-year-old paternal uncle, who is a community leader, called me to ask whom between Atiku Abubakar and Bola Tinubu he should vote and canvass support for. That was a strange request considering that in 2019 he resisted my entreaty to him to not vote or campaign for Buhari because of the danger that a Buhari second term would pose for Nigeria.

He apparently sensed that I was hesitant to make any recommendations because the last time I did he balked. He was a true believer in Buhari even when overwhelming evidence had shown that Buhari wasn’t whom he had claimed to be. In response to my hesitation, he said he was asking because all I had told him about Buhari had materialized.

If I was right about Buhari, I might be right about the next president, he said. I don’t think that is accurate. I have no crystal ball to gaze at the future. I only predicted Buhari’s ongoing presidential disaster based on what was already happening, which his supporters like my uncle wore blinders over.

Anyway, I asked my uncle why he limited his choices to Tinubu and Atiku. He said it was because they were the only serious contenders in the race and that he had a hard time choosing between them.

I asked if he had heard of Peter Obi. He hadn’t. Not even remotely. And my uncle isn’t some uneducated, rural bumpkin. Although he lives in the countryside in retirement, he is a UK-trained medical professional who is politically active. At his request, I told him about Obi and said Obi’s name gets mentioned along with Tinubu and Atiku in urban Nigeria.

Like a typical Muslim northern Nigerian, he couldn’t get past the anxieties about an Igbo president throwing Nigeria into turmoil by using the instruments of federal power to declare Biafra, particularly in light of the recrudescence of Biafra movements and the mainstreaming of neo-Biafra sentiments in the Southeast.

I politely told him that he had his anxieties mixed up. The resurgence of Biafra movements and neo-Biafra sentiments in Igboland is the consequence of the feelings of exclusion from the center among the Igbo people. Electing an Igbo person as president would eliminate Biafranism—or push it to the fringes.

Given the wide geographic spread of Igbo people in Nigeria, I said, it isn’t reasonable to say that they don’t want to be in Nigeria. An insular, inward-looking people who resent the diversity of Nigeria and want to recoil into their own geo-cultural enclave would live only in their region.


Our conversation ended without any recommendations from me. Fast forward to last weekend. My uncle called to say he won’t only vote for Peter Obi but would campaign for him in the community. He said my siblings and cousins, whom he said had been influenced by my writing to become Obi supporters, had convinced him that Peter Obi was the candidate to support in the 2023 election.

(To be perfectly honest, I had not the remotest idea that my writing promotes the candidacy of Peter Obi because not a few Obi supporters have insulted me in the past over what I wrote about him. Although I’ve publicly stated my preference for an Igbo president in 2023 because I’m convinced that it’s the surest guarantee for Nigeria’s continuity as a united nation, I am entirely non-partisan in this election cycle.)

I’m bringing my uncle’s story because it exemplifies a trend I’ve been observing in the last few weeks. Although there is still a lot of indifference to—and, in some cases, resentment at—Peter Obi in the Muslim north, I am sensing a progressive acceptance of his candidacy.

Another person I spoke with from Kano who says he is now warming up to Obi told me several people he knows and interacts with in the Northwest are giving Obi a chance both because of the growing intensity of the hurt Buhari has inflicted on people in the region and the fact that the alternatives to Obi seem like Buhari.

Tinubu’s health scares, frequent medical trips to London, and struggles with communicating with the public are disturbingly redolent of Buhari. And although Atiku seems healthy and is evidently the most prepared presidential candidate, he is Buhari’s contemporary. So, his age counts against him, not to mention 2023 is the year for a southern president—as 2015 and 2019 were for a northern president.

I don’t think the easing of the apathy— and hostility— to Obi in the Muslim North will be sufficient to cause him to win the plurality of votes there, but it may get him surprisingly higher votes than most people are inclined to expect. Of course, in electoral politics predictions often have no more than a one-week validity, and this is particularly true of the 2023 presidential election.

There are broadly five voting blocs in Nigeria: the Northern Muslim bloc (which is sometimes not based on contiguous geography and can spread across the three subdivisions of the region), the northern Christian bloc (which is also not always based on contiguous geography and can encompass a wide stretch of the region), the southwest bloc (which is entirely Yoruba and customarily unaffected by religious identification, although this is changing), the southeast (which is entirely Igbo) and the southern ethnic minority bloc.

To win a presidential election, a candidate needs to win at least four of these blocs. No candidate, for now, dominates in four voting blocs.

Bola Tinubu appears to be dominant in the Southwest, although I sense that his health challenges are chipping away at his advantage there. Many people in the region who genuinely want him to be president have worries that he may die in office and allow the North to take over power again. Well, some northern Muslims had said that of Buhari (based on what happened to Umar Musa Yar’adua), and the man seems to be on the mend and looking way healthier than he has ever been.

Atiku Abubakar seems to be the favorite among Muslims in the Northeast (except in Borno and Yobe) with a potential to expand his reach to other parts of the Muslim North. His problem is that because he has always been liberal, cosmopolitan, and not delimited by religion, he doesn’t excite northern Muslims who define their identities in religious terms.

It’s precisely why he used to be more popular in the South (and in the Christian North) than in the Muslim North. But Peter Obi has stolen his thunder in his erstwhile electoral base, and this was the basis of a joke I saw on social media that says Atiku has in the bag all the votes he needs to be president in 2023—except that Obi is holding the bag.

Obi appears to have a lock on the votes in the Southeast, the South-South, and in such predominantly Christians states as Benue, Plateau, and even Taraba. Christians in southern Kaduna and Southern Kebbi seem more favorably disposed to him than they are to any other candidate. The major challenge of his popularity in the Southeast is that it may not translate to high voter turnout in light of the continuing violence and threats of violence by IPOB.

Muslims in the North-central and the Northwest appear to be the only noncommittal, persuadable voting bloc because they have no sentimental investment in any of the three major presidential candidates. They can swing in any direction.

Because Obi is making a mark, however imperceptible, in these regions where he was previously unknown, we should recognize that he is no longer the underdog that he once was. In order to avoid a repeat of Buhari, critical citizens should ask Obi hard, soul-searching questions because he could be president.

For example, why did he allow the Anambra State University branch of ASUU to go on strike for more than six months and even going so far as to sack the school’s vice chancellor “because of his alleged romance with the striking workers of the university,” according to the Daily Sun of January 19, 2011. How is he different from Buhari in this regard?

Why did he allow doctors in Anambra State to go on strike for 13 months, which led to many needless deaths? The doctors called off their strike without Obi meeting their demands. And he implemented the no-work-no-pay rule when Anambra civil servants went on strike to demand to be paid minimum wage.

While he was governor of Anambra, he played typical Nigerian politics of divide and rule. He played Catholics against Anglicans and even stigmatized political opponents as “Yoruba” people, according to Professor Okey Ndibe who wrote extensively on him.

“It is similarly appalling that a governor who reportedly has ambitions for higher political office could not restrain himself from disparaging Mr. Ngige as a Yoruba candidate,” Ndibe wrote in his April 18, 2011, column titled “Peter Obi, Akunyili and Political Folly.” “Even if we accepted the silly argument that the ACN was a Yoruba party – so what? Is the governor allergic to forging political alliances with the Yoruba? Is he not aware that such appeals to base, ethnic sentiments would return to haunt him if he ever seeks to be a political player at the national level?”

That was prophetic. This doesn’t make Obi any worse than his opponents. But because he could be president, we should interrogate him so we won’t be blindsided.

Read more at:
faruk always manufacture fiction to decieve readers .A uk train Medical doctor is too smart to be asking a US based teacher who to vote for!

102 Likes 9 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by JASONjnr(m): 8:11am On Oct 08, 2022
I read alot about urchins asking Obidients what Peter Obi did in Anambra state....And when asked the same question, they will say that Tinubu lay the foundation of good governance.

The other person went ahead to say that, other governors of Anambra state outperformed Peter Obi.

They refused to accept that Obi saved money for other governors to make use of. But wants us to believe that Tinubu who did nothing but converted Lagos state to his private business did a good job to be appointing Managers that will manage Lagos for him while he's the CEO of Lagos state.

The North will gradually get in touch with the reality. I believe that Datti is doing little to influence the region. He needs to do more to create awareness if he wants to win with Peter Obi.

210 Likes 17 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by kettykin: 8:12am On Oct 08, 2022
What then happens to Yusuf, so some Northerners have apathy towards Peter Obi because of Biafra but have no apathy towards Atiku, kwanwaso because of bandits, Boko Haram, herdsmen.

I still think the problem of Nigeria is largely ignorance and partly unlearned affliction arising from unleashed tribal fears and hatred. This is not resolved amicably then one day Russia Vs Ukraine will happen here

80 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by ekineme: 8:15am On Oct 08, 2022
I will vote Peter Obi, it's the only choice.

178 Likes 12 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by chatinent: 8:26am On Oct 08, 2022
Make una calm down. Nigeria don expire already.

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by chimeee: 8:28am On Oct 08, 2022
I'm formal drug Lord turn political,I run my government like drug cartel, placing my loyalist in key positions to do my bidden, my followers are all zombies, nothing I ever said is true, but I made them believe me and make them call the truthful ones liers, I place them in chains and make them love their chains. Who am I ?

49 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Peterobiisathie(f): 8:30am On Oct 08, 2022
how can structureless party penetrate northern state? no
Peter Pandora Obituary remain a loser

101 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by PointZerom: 8:30am On Oct 08, 2022
grin

Tinubu’s health scares, frequent medical trips to London, and struggles with communicating with the public are disturbingly redolent of Buhari.


Tinubu is a disaster.

67 Likes 8 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 8:31am On Oct 08, 2022
Na wa for Politics o! So those people in whose states Peter Obi is making inroads are no longer Hausa and Fulani Cows? So one of them who's Nigeria's president is no longer Bubu, Cloned Buhari, the Vegetable and Jubril of Sudan? What's it that Expediency will not make a desperate presidential candidate do? Tinubu who has been making his own inroads since 1999 was cursed by them because according to them, he brought the calamity called Buhari - a northerner o! Alex Ekwueme who was vice president to one of these Fulani Cows has remained blameless till today. Their forgotten leader, Azikiwe, who formed alliance with these Fulani Cows in 1959 and 1978 has remained blameless till today. These people are genuine Pharisees, if you ask me. Now, Bingo is returning to its vomit and it's chewing it as a cow would the cud, and yet they're clapping! The Almight God must have created the Igbo using the leftovers of the clay he worked with on Saturday night, when he was already done with His work of Creation and was about to cease from His exertions of the previous six days! What a people!

100 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by CaptainAyub: 8:31am On Oct 08, 2022
I greatly pity the Niger Deltans.
The parasites sucking them dry aren't ready to let go.
Anytime the parasites in the zoo hear of Biafra, they begin convulsing.
Why would they bother themselves about the Igbos who they hate so much leaving Nigeria =
Because the Niger Delta will also likely go if the Biafrans go.
Mr Farooq Kperogi also can't help adding their usual Islamic taqqiya lies once on a while.
You so called uncle,whether imaginary or real can't be the way u described him and not have heard of Peter Obi(UK trained health worker,Internet savvy etc)

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by BeardedMeat(m): 8:31am On Oct 08, 2022
Abdul05:
Everybody knows even the outside observers know that obi the idiot is a dullard ... grin grin


Now that the idiot is out of race so let us talk about Atiku and tinubu.... grin grin



For two weeks, you lost voice and only commented with a laugh emoji.

Now your juju man is back and you have found your voice again. Kudos.

Peter Oluwaseun Hassan Obi is your next president!

Farooq kperogi is one of the most brilliant and unbiased writer of all times.

His kind words are very appreciated.
Darts taken in good faith.

39 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Omesbrit(m): 8:32am On Oct 08, 2022
Obi from under dog to a candidate to beat. He is the most sellable candidate, sentiment aside.

45 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 8:32am On Oct 08, 2022
Let the naysayers continue talking about the rallies and the visuals. What they dont know is that that's just 15%. The rest 85% of what Obi is doing is off camera.

Most of you attacking the man dont know anything about the man. In 2003, when he came from nowhere in politics to run for office from a 5months old party, he was dragged far much more then than even now. But the man kept at his goal without responding to them. At the end, he beat the parties with the structure

42 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Bizibi(m): 8:32am On Oct 08, 2022
Lp hasn't enter the north only a selected states.

3 Likes

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by SMGGroup: 8:32am On Oct 08, 2022
Most peple against Peter Obi does so not because he isn't qualified, but because he is an Igbo man. Their bias is solely based on tribalism and not the progress of the nation.

They will rather have Nigeria go to the dusts than have a better country being run by an Igbo man. The youths must wake up

57 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Qwsaese: 8:32am On Oct 08, 2022
Kola
Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by LtChisom: 8:33am On Oct 08, 2022
shocked

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by jumper524(m): 8:33am On Oct 08, 2022
Farouk. Biafra struggle started the moment Jonathan lost his reelection.
Even before Buhari could make any appointment in office, Nnamdi kanu was alreading drumming for war.
You lied to your uncle and he won't trust you in the future when he finally gets the truth.
Devil1Messenger:

That is a big lie
Biafra struggle started towards the tail end of buhari first tenure, 17/18 and we are aware of the reasons. Most of you just prefer not to tell yourself the truth. No position for the igbos or South South, from president down to CJ
Wetin dey happen?
by 2017 kanu was already arrested and released on bail which he jumped.

https://www.nairaland.com/2681634/ipob-russia-calls-world-stand
This was 2015
There are more of such treads as from 2015.

About appountments, ononoghen is from kano while ekweremadu deputy senate president is from Katsina. Also ibe kachikwu minister of petroleum for state is from Zamfara or cbn governor emefiele is from kebbi.
You said something about big lie, come again.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by franchasofficia: 8:33am On Oct 08, 2022
Nigerians that have discerning mind already know that Mr Peter Gregory Obi is the next President of Nigeria but the tribal bigots who rely only on their tribal bigotry and hatred will never accept the reality even on the day Obi is being sworn in as President.






Even Bola Tinubu doesn't miss watching any of Obi's interviews according to one of his close aides, and what does that tell you? Tinubu knows that Peter Obi will win but he can't just let his followers know his fears right now, which is normal for every big political criminal like Tinubu

17 Likes

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Oddfinder001: 8:34am On Oct 08, 2022
smiley
Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 8:34am On Oct 08, 2022
A day after election you will know that obi didn't make any inroad in the north.

Obi will get the treatment okadibo and ojukwu buhari got in igboland in 2003 and 2007 respectively

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by PointZerom: 8:34am On Oct 08, 2022
chimeee:
I'm formal drug Lord turn political,I run my government like drug cartel, placing my loyalist in key positions to do my bidden, my followers are all zombies, nothing I ever said is true, but I made them believe me and make them call the truthful ones liers, I place them in chains and make them love their chains. Who am I ?


Tinubu
No primary or secondary school education but he graduated from Chicago University.

This is the wonder of the age.

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by Bontafa: 8:35am On Oct 08, 2022
GOODMAN88:
A day after election you will know that obi didn't make any inroad in the north.

Obi will get the treatment okadibo and ojukwu buhari got in igboland in 2003 and 2007 respectively

Beer parlour gossip

15 Likes

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by potent5(m): 8:35am On Oct 08, 2022
Kperogi has become a wailing wailer for Peter Obi matter. cheesy grin

Kperogi should take it easy make heart attack no send am to early grave because of ObiDatti matter. grin

4 Likes

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by ecolime(m): 8:36am On Oct 08, 2022
Northerners are voting Peter Obi and he shall win Insha Allah

22 Likes

Re: Peter Obi’s Quiet inroads into the Muslim North By Farooq A. Kperogi by ShaqFu: 8:36am On Oct 08, 2022
Nonsense.

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