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Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Bobloco(op): 5:25am On Oct 26, 2024
Across Nigeria, many poor citizens are battered by hunger pangs, forcing them to abandon decency and steal food in public places. Some have also resorted to serially begging for food and seeking palliatives in a bid to put an end to the seemingly endless cycle of hardship in the country, VICTOR AYENI writes

The knock on the metal door at the unexpected hour was feeble, yet persistent. The time was a few minutes to 6 am.

The early morning darkness was gradually being swept away by the light of sunrise while many residents of Ojodu, Lagos State, were still in their beds.

Mrs Yetunde Oyadiran’s hands trembled as she knocked on her neighbour’s door – not from the cold, but from the burden of her decision.

This was the last place she could ever imagine herself to be, standing at someone else’s doorstep on a cold Saturday morning to beg for food.

“I am really sorry to disturb you this very morning,” the mother of two said, as she embarrassingly avoided making eye contact with her neighbour, simply known as Sunday.

“Please, I need your help. Help me because of my children. I gave them the last food in the house to eat yesterday evening. They have nothing to eat,”
she said in Yoruba language, as tears welled up in her eyes.


Her clothes, faded and threadbare, clung to her body like shadows of better days. Her husband had been out of work since February, ever since the company he worked for laid off its employees.

In his desperate attempt to provide for his family, Oyadiran’s husband took up labour work at a food factory, earning N2,000 a day – a meagre amount that barely covered his needs, let alone those of his family.

Oyadiran, a teacher in a private school, had not been paid for two months and had been burdened with loans from friends and family.

“Please, I would appreciate any help from you to help me feed my children. I can still manage myself, but I don’t want my children to starve,” she added.

When Sunday offered her an appreciable quantity of raw foodstuff with some money, Oyadiran was so flustered that she nearly ran out of the right words to speak.

An admixture of prayer and gratitude flowed out of her lips as her eyes shone in surprise.

“I couldn’t sleep all night. I kept wondering, are we going to starve to death amid this hardship? I told myself, even if the worst should happen to me, I would go out and look for help for my children,” the mother said with an emotion-laden tone.


Like Oyadiran and her husband, millions of Nigerians are uncertain where their next meal will come from, as the country grapples with a relentless surge in food prices.

Across Nigeria, children, youths, and the elderly are battling the pains of hunger, as soaring food prices and limited financial resources make survival increasingly difficult.

‘I eat once on most days’

When Peter Onuoha sold his farm in his village in Imo State and came down to Lagos last year, he thought he had found a legitimate investment job.

Realising later that he had fallen victim to an investment scam, he struggled to find a job which provided accommodation.

Eventually, Onuoha found a security job, but just as he was about to get on his feet, he lost his mother.

“I became indebted due to the funeral, and my salary of N46,000 couldn’t even cover anything or help me get on with life. Now, I eat once a day most times, while frantically searching for a job.


“I have a younger sister who also found a job, but with the high food prices coupled with our low income, we have nothing to live on. There are days, I have to beg for money and give her all because as a girl, I don’t want her to fall prey to bad men because of lack of food or money,”
he told Saturday PUNCH.

Like Onuoha, on most days of the week, the pangs of hunger wrack through Tokunbo Adeseye’s slender body as he struggles to find employment.

The graduate of Microbiology told Saturday PUNCH that he relocated from Osogbo to Lagos in July hoping that he would find a white-collar job.

But having navigated the state of aquatic splendour, his efforts to get a job have been fraught with frustration.

“I currently squat with a friend. It was in a bid to survive that I recently took a loan to start selling clothing and accessories. But affording food is now a serious task. Sometimes, I eat once or twice a day.

“Only the rich can afford to eat thrice in this country now. Things are so tough and sometimes, it’s hard to have hope. The only good part of it is the support I receive from my church welfare. There is so much suffering in Nigeria. Who did we offend?”
Adeseye queried.

Widespread frustration


Voicing her frustration, a mother of one, Bola Owoade, lamented that the increase in food prices has taken some foods off her table.

“I can’t afford to buy yams, beans or even plantain anymore because they are now expensive. Eggs too are gradually disappearing from our table.

“A crate of eggs now is N8,000. Each week, the prices of food keep increasing and my income is still the same, for how long will all of this continue? They should just tell us when this hell will come to an end,”
Owoade said.

A food seller, Rachael Olubumi, told Saturday PUNCH that it is not only buyers who are affected by the soaring prices.

She noted that even sellers are not making much gain in selling foodstuffs because of poor sales and low profit.

“I just bought a bag of rice two days ago. A bag of long-grain rice is now N130,000 whereas the short grain is N70,000. By the time you do the calculations, you just realise that people would rather buy the latter because it is cheaper.

“At the end of the day, you find out that you make a marginal profit, but when you tell people they won’t believe it. The profit that we are making on selling food is shrinking and it’s affecting us too.


“At first, they said dollar exchange was responsible, now what excuse do they have again? On some days, I wake up and just wish I could go into another profession because we are not making profits anymore,” she stated in a sad tone.

Hunger crisis

The removal of the long-standing fuel subsidy by the Federal Government in June 2023 triggered an economic reality which led to a sharp increase in the prices of food among other commodities.

As of September 2024, the World Bank’s food security report ranked Nigeria as the fifth country hardest hit by food inflation in the world and the third in Africa, trailing Malawi and Liberia.

Similarly, according to the World Bank’s Food Security Update Report, the number of Nigerians facing acute food shortages has increased by 28 per cent since 2023, placing the country among the top five globally for the most significant rise in hunger.

This assessment is reflected on the global hunger ranking chart, with Nigeria emerging 110th out of the 127 countries in the 2024 Global Hunger Index. With 28.8 points on the Index, Nigeria is among countries with “serious” hunger levels.

Recently, the World Bank also released the Nigeria Development Update report, which offered a bleak outlook on poverty in Nigeria, stating that over 129 million Nigerians now live below the national poverty line.


The latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics also revealed that the inflation rate in September 2024 surged to 32.7 per cent from 32.2 per cent the previous month, with food inflation being a major driver.

Agrarian communities in Bauchi, Jigawa, Adamawa, and Borno, which produce major staples such as rice, maize, wheat, onions, and cowpea, have been significantly affected by insecurity.

Foodstuff dealers in the South-East region, comprising Abia, Anambra, Enugu, Imo, and Ebonyi states have also linked the rising prices of food items to extortions at roadblocks mounted on many roads by military and paramilitary officers.

In an ironic twist, many farmers in the North-West, North-Central and North-East were morbidly afraid to go to their farms to avoid being kidnapped or killed by bandits or terrorists.

Furthermore, flooding incidents in agrarian communities have also worsened food availability, affordability, and accessibility in many states, leaving millions in dire humanitarian need.

Long queue as caucasian distributes bread

Last Saturday, a video that went viral on social media captured numerous Lagos residents lining up to receive loaves of bread from a Caucasian evangelist.

The video clip, which was shared by X-Daily on X.com on Saturday and viewed by Saturday PUNCH, showed the long queue of recipients along Eleganza Junction, near Parklane Hotel, Ajao Estate, in the Oshodi-Isolo area of the state.

In the video, the white evangelist was seen handing a large loaf of bread to each person in the queue, who accepted it with visible joy on their faces.

The narrator in the video said, “This is Ajao Estate. You can see a white man there, sharing bread with people in Ajao Estate. This morning he shared Bibles, but people were not on the line like this before, but now that he’s sharing bread, the line is filled with people.

“See how people have joined the queue. People are hungry; that’s what people are shouting. Does this man (President Bola Tinubu) want to finish us before he releases this country to us? Can you see a white man sharing bread and Bibles? See people jubilating.”


Many netizens have described the video which has garnered over 20,000 views as a reflection of the hunger crisis in the country.

Blaming the hunger situation on failed policies enacted by the President, an X user, Tobi Akinbo, wrote, “A white man sharing bread at Ajao Estate Lagos State. The population of hungry Nigerians increasing by the day, as a result of wicked policies.”

On his part, Izuchukwu Nwabueze, wrote, “Tinubu and his APC format will turn Nigerians into beggars in the 21st century. We are back to the colonial era.”


“Blessed are those who do not place their hope in Nigeria, for they shall not be disappointed,”
Always, an X user wrote.

Also reacting, an X user, Tunexi, said, “The commentary is hilarious though. It is the person who has eaten that will have the strength to read the Bible.”

Another netizen, King VDM wrote, “Oyinbo (white) people will just be using this to laugh at us in their country now. Tinubu, well done o.”

Also reacting, Chibuzo Victor, wrote, “He (the preacher) will use this video to collect grants from the United Nations and other organisations alike.”

A resident of the area, Adejuwon Joseph, told Saturday PUNCH that the gesture of the foreign preacher is a positive one given the economic hardship in the country.

“Forget about whether he is a preacher or not, are we going to deny that he is actually helping people? That singular gesture has provided breakfast for many families today. There is hunger everywhere in Nigeria. It’s our reality and we can no longer deny it,” he stated.

In his reaction, the United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund Chief of Health, Dr Eduardo Celades, said, “I’ve been in Nigeria through the years and this is the worst year that I have seen. It’s likely tied to the economic situation.


“We have seen an increase in poverty. A bag of rice is now much more expensive and we are seeing malnutrition emerging strongly in the North-East and the North-West.”

‘I stole out of hunger’

On September 6, a video of a man in a blue shirt pretending to buy bread from a vendor at a bustling market in Ibadan, Oyo State, went viral.

Unknown to the unsuspecting seller, the man had quickly taken a loaf of bread worth N1,500 and hid it in his bag.

In the video, a bystander who claimed to have seen the whole mischief from afar confronted the man and exposed him.

“That bread you just put in your bag, bring it out now!” the bystander ordered the alleged thief in an angry tone.

“Are you mad? The woman (seller) insisted that she was looking for her bread, didn’t you know that I saw you stealing it? Kneel there! You are a thief,”
the male bystander blurted out, as he hit the man with his palm.


The next day, in another video posted by Oyo Affairs on Facebook, the alleged thief was identified as a popular footballer named Rashid who admitted he stole the bread out of hunger.

Recounting what transpired on the fateful day, Rashid said, “I am a footballer and when I couldn’t make ends meet, I resorted to working as a bricklayer. That day I was coming from where I went to play. The match was cancelled because of the downpour so I decided to return home.


“I am sorry for what happened that day. I was just hungry. I’m not a bad person; it was hunger that pushed me to that state. Though I have my children living with me, my wife has left me.”

The content creator who interviewed Rashid, D’Caretaker, appealed to kind-hearted citizens to financially support the footballer whom he described as a childhood friend who had been adversely affected by the country’s economic situation.

Scrambling for food

On October 3, a video surfaced on X showing a crowd of women and youths on Lagos Island grappling for loaves of bread distributed as part of a palliative effort to commemorate Nigeria’s 64th Independence Day.

The crowd was visibly restrained and managed by uniformed men and political representatives, who escorted each woman from the crowd to a pickup van, where they were given a large loaf of bread.


While this could be described as a more coordinated measure of palliative aid, there have been instances of aggressive, hunger-ravaged citizens descending on trucks conveying food items or looting food warehouses.

In the early hours of July 28, many youths broke into warehouses in Adamawa State and looted food and non-food items belonging to the National Emergency Management Agency and the state government.

Two warehouses in Yola, the state capital, were reportedly attacked. The youths allegedly drilled holes in the warehouses’ walls to gain access to it, a move which triggered a wave of arrests in which 44 suspects were nabbed by the police.

On March 3, hoodlums also attacked a warehouse belonging to the Agricultural and Rural Development Secretariat of the Federal Capital Territory Administration located in the Dei-Dei area of Abuja where they looted rice, grains, and other relief items.

Similarly, on February 22, irate youths disrupted a protest by fish vendors in Niger State and stole food items from trucks stuck in traffic along Kaduna Road in the Suleja area of Niger State.

Hunger protests

On August 1, many angry Nigerians took to the streets to voice their dissatisfaction with government policies and economic conditions.


Convened by several groups, the protesters demanded a change in economic policies and called for an end to hardship and corruption in governance.

Among the protesters who hit the streets of Lagos on the first day of the protest was an unidentified female protester, with an empty pot, lamenting the hunger.

“Ebi o! Ebi o! (Hunger o! Hunger o!),” the woman shouted, urging the government to come to the aid of poor citizens and improve the economy.

Speaking in a viral video, the woman said she was an indigene of Ibadan, Oyo State, but had lived in Lagos for over 50 years.

In another viral clip on X, the woman disclosed that she could barely afford one meal a day.

Speaking in Yoruba, she said, “I can barely afford to eat once a day. The hunger has become too much. It is unbearable. My children are suffering.

“There is no money in my pocket. Does this government want to kill us? Overthinking wants to kill me. I can no longer survive. It is too much for me to bear. The government should come to my aid.”


Kicking off a crowdfunding initiative, Afrobeat singer, Oxlade, as well as many other Nigerians pooled money together for her to the tune of over N3m.

In his response to the protesters, Tinubu called for a suspension of the protest and promised to tackle the economic hardship in the country.

“I have heard you loud and clear. I understand the pain and frustration that drive these protests, and I want to assure you that our government is committed to listening and addressing the concerns of our citizens.

“Let nobody misinform and mis-educate you about your country or tell you that your government does not care about you,”
the President said in a nationwide broadcast.

Economists weigh in

Speaking with Saturday PUNCH, an economist, Oluwaseun Wusu, decried the high costs of foodstuffs which he said had pushed many households into poverty.

“Rising food prices for staples like rice, maize, and wheat have driven many households into poverty and in a country where you have many people living below a dollar each day, it has forced many families to now eat fewer meals.


“This is why food palliatives would always be sought by the populace. Where you have high energy costs, increased transport fares and insecurity hampering the agricultural sector, it is expected that food prices will also spike. It will push people into hunger and make people vulnerable,”
Wusu said.

He added that the government needed to invest in the agricultural sector and implement sustainable farming practices to enhance food production and security.

On her part, an agricultural economist from the Centre for Agricultural Development and Sustainable Environment at the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Tobi Awolope, attributed the high hunger rate in Nigeria to climate change.

Awolope noted that many farmers had a low adaptive capacity to cope with the effects of climate change, such as irregular rainfall patterns and lack of irrigation.

“Climate change has reversed the progress towards achieving Sustainable Development Goals 1 and 2, which aim to eradicate poverty and hunger.

Smallholder farmers are struggling to adapt to the changing climate, and this has led to declining food availability and rising prices,” she said.

She emphasised the need for government support for farmers, including subsidising production inputs, and providing technology and irrigation assistance.


“Farmers cannot mitigate the effects of climate change alone. The government needs to step in and support them to ensure food security,”
she added.

Awolope also stressed the importance of utilising research recommendations to inform policy decisions, saying, “This is not the time to leave research output on the shelf. We need to use those recommendations to make informed decisions that will support our farmers and ensure food availability.”
https://punchng.com/nigerians-turn-beggars-as-biting-hunger-ravages-communities/

Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by gratiaeo(m): 5:32am On Oct 26, 2024
Until Nigeria decides to treat APC like cancer they have become we will never have peace
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Bobloco(op):
It shall never be well with those who worked, supported and encouraged this wicked and draconian Tinubu regime

Thunder 🔥 Tinubu
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by atobs4real(m): 5:33am On Oct 26, 2024
Punch nee us ooo
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by agulion: 5:33am On Oct 26, 2024
We Yoruba Muslims are very comfortable with Tinubus gvt everything is ok in the country, all this propaganda from Aboki and ipob will not work
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Jestin: 5:33am On Oct 26, 2024
Tinubu just dey press every Nigerians neck

Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by atobs4real(m): 5:34am On Oct 26, 2024
Punch nee us ooo
Hunger is the land of giant of Africa.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Peakdesign23(f): 5:34am On Oct 26, 2024
This is really sad. Hunger kills, hunger is real, it can make you do and undo.
If only the country we find ourselves provided us with good Jobs it would have been better, rather we're fighting for bad leadership. The backwardness that the so called "Giant of Africa is facing, is highly insane.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by atobs4real(m): 5:35am On Oct 26, 2024
Punch nee us ooo
Hunger is the land of giant of Africa.Tpain is not prepared to rule.
He only came to mark attendance
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Zetty177x:
Nigerians are not ready. Other Countries youths are doing so much of technology..if the youths serious they would have developed drones...and off course we know what drones are used for.
Make una de wait or japa. These politicians met Nigeria great. Dollar to naira was less than one naira. They ate everything. They went to University abroad with scholarship. They made Nigerians not to be able to afford food,not to talk of education. They ate u people's future. Now this T-Pain has put y'all on hunger, soon ur children will be dead from hunger and starvation

My happiness in all of these is that Yorubas are hungry. Their name full the write-up. Next time them go get sense. Them too lack sense
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Chindedum95(f): 5:35am On Oct 26, 2024
The hunger in town now is not child's play... 5k can no longer feed someone for 1 week...
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Eriokanmi:
That's the consequence of the stupidity of some millions of Nigerians in the last election. This will linger for the next 3 years and beyond, sadly. I pity whosoever that will take over from the over-hyped tinubu. He has to be a super strategist with a strong economic team to heal the seriously ailing nation. Yesterday, IMF denied asking Nigerians to remove subsidy. The other day, they also denied the Tinubu's policy of floating of the naira. If they ask our politicians to kill their people, they won't hesitate, so long as it will benefit them.

Tinubu should eat his humble pie by approaching Jonathan on how he built up a formidable economic team across the ethnic groups in Nigeria, who saved us from the global economic meltdown years back. We only heard of businesses collapsing and people committing suicide with companies filing for bankruptcy on the tv and newspapers. We never experienced it rather, our GDP kept soaring. Na dis enter apc gang for eye.

All what the Jonathan administration enjoyed, including oil boom is being enjoyed by the Tinubu-led administration with nothing to show. They even removed subsidy which they stopped Jonathan from achieving but with nothing to show. Sadly, some Nigerians are stark illiterates, including those who claimed to have passed through the universities. Illiteracy of the mind is the worst of all kinds. We are so gullible in Nigeria and soon forget that, when the chips are down, na everyone go collect wotowoto.

What's the outcome of the TAM at the phc refineries today grin? After deceiving you 4 times of the refineries operations kick off, NNPCL said yesterday that the TAM had failed grin. Where're the subsidy palliatives of last year may, as announced by Tinubu? Shebi they've started singing the be patient with us song again like buhari did and destroyed our economy? You'd still fall for this again. Last week, seun asked sanwoolu on channels tv of the update on the 4th mainland bridge which they used to campaign every 4 years and he said, no money grin. We're in it together so, keep falling for their lies.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Freetech:
.... but how is this epistle by punch help the hungry beggars?

God gave us large expanse of land and favourable weather but what do we do with it?

Why do we need food import from Niger, Cameroon, Benin Republic to feed? Laziness

Reading everything here show that Punch editor is economical with the truth. Expanding problem hiding solution

The root cause of our problem is laziness, prodigy and indiscriminate procreation depleting our $ and doubling our population every 20years.

People are spending 30-40m to japa, where do they get the money from the same Nigeria with the so call dead economy.

More than 20% of our dollar now go to paying of school fees abroad and other frivolities like birthday wedding and senseless vacation in Dubai etc. So government should continue subsidizing $ for them.

Everyone is criticizing, nobody offer solution. Very amusing when Obi the all round failure said he will borrow to sustain subsidy, in a country already using more than 70% of income to service debt
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by eepeepook: 5:36am On Oct 26, 2024
The crucial questions is, when did Nigerians never beg? We have begged since the 60s and will beg into 2050. This is not news. Life continues. Many people will rather beg than spend a minute to think their way out of a situation. It is true.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by TreasureJunky: 5:36am On Oct 26, 2024
Na Tinubu do this one.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Peakdesign23(f): 5:36am On Oct 26, 2024
Chindedum95:
The hunger in town now is not child's play... 5k can no longer feed someone for 1 week...
You made a good point sir, 5k can't feed someone for 3 days.
Is it the price of gas, kerosine or firewood? Or the price of food stuff? Yet money has no value, we're living in a jungle indeed.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by allthingsgood: 5:37am On Oct 26, 2024
Pls stop calling Tinubu, what are your Governors doinghuh
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by zed7: 5:38am On Oct 26, 2024
No sympathy for anyone. The same people crying and begging will still vote along religious and ethnic lines at the expense of qualification and competence.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by allthingsgood: 5:38am On Oct 26, 2024
TreasureJunky:
Na Tinubu do this one.
what of your Governorhuh is he not supposed to be closer to u
you people support visionless buffoons in the State, then be looking up to the center to solve all problems
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by CountinBlessins(m):
Yorubas have destroyed this country.

Never again should they be allowed to ever rule this nation .
Power should only be allowed between hausa, ibo and us.
Never again will Yoruba be given power
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by phorget(m): 5:40am On Oct 26, 2024
Hmmmmm!
It's no more funny though.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by MVLOX(m):
No be lie ooo Nigerians have indeed turned beggars.... The last bag of rice I am still paying just for got finished and as it stands I cannot afford to get another one.... I am still thinking of an alternative that my children will be taking to school from next week.... Omo it is not funny again
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Gadafii: 5:41am On Oct 26, 2024
Buhari transformed Nigeria from once robust and happy people with one of the fastest growing and thriving economy to poverty capital of the world, with an epileptic economy that could barely retain fastest growing and thriving economy in Africa... Tinubu came on board and finished work completely just under 2 years, Nigeria is now going to be the beggars capital of the world.


APC is evil and demonic
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Iyajelili(f): 5:42am On Oct 26, 2024
I'm not sure there's a middle class in nigerian anymore.
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Akwamkpuruamu: 5:43am On Oct 26, 2024
Its T-pain on da beat!
Sheygenomics
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Angelfrost(m): 5:43am On Oct 26, 2024
Anytime I remember "Occupy Nigeria of 2012" and 2019 elections, I simply refuse to pity most Nigerians.

The same bastards that demonized fuel Subsidy removal, now came in and removed the same subsidy, and you people are asking for Pity!
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Whois(m): 5:46am On Oct 26, 2024
God help us

Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by ufotunang: 5:46am On Oct 26, 2024
Renewed hope to renewed shege
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Bigkoko: 5:46am On Oct 26, 2024
Asiwaju laid the groundwork for economic disaster when he instigated Ameachi, fashola, akpabio akpabio, Rauf and Oshiomole to insist on sharing what GEJ & NOI saved for the raining days in ECA/SWF accounts.

Thus, Asiwaju not Buhari was rightly the destroyer of Nigeria economy! He subtly started it in 2012, developed it in 2014 & escalated it in 2015 and now putting finishing touches on it in 2024.

Asiwaju is an agent of the darkest part of the occult world. If you people like, don't remove the occult grandmaster before it's too late!

Don't forget a child of G-d told you this for free!
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by Bobloco(op): 5:47am On Oct 26, 2024
allthingsgood:
Pls stop calling Tinubu, what are your Governors doinghuh
Is it the governors that floated the naira, leading to the devaluation of the currency? 

Is it the governors that hiked up the pump price of petrol from N185 per litre to over N1200 per litre, leading to exorbitant transport fares, a high inflation rate, an increase in the price of goods and services, a high cost of staple food items, etc.?

Are the governors responsible for the calamitous economic policies being dished out by Tinubu on a daily that have successfully inflicted premium hunger, strife, and starvation on Nigerians?
Re: Nigerians Turn Beggars As Biting Hunger Ravages Communities - Punch by ufotunang: 5:47am On Oct 26, 2024
This is what you get when you vote based on tribalism, ethnicity, religion and ignore competency and a person with good leadership qualities...it's a pity... renewed hope to renewed shege
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