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Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 10:11am On Nov 22, 2025
Today's Saturday Tribune column, one of the most difficult I've written in a long time because of the enormous emotional energy dissipated in writing it, finds eerie parallels between the pervasive sense of siege in 2014 Nigeria and now:

The events and atmospherics of the past few days in Nigeria feel eerily and frighteningly familiar. They are redolent of the disabling instability and helplessness (and more) of 2014 and 2015 when Goodluck Jonathan was president.

Three crises are unfolding in near synchrony. One, there’s a resurgence of Boko Haram activities. Two, there’s an alarming escalation of mass kidnappings in the northwest and north central zones. And three, we’re seeing more coordinated banditry along major travel corridors in most parts of the country.

Each one has appeared before, but they almost never spike simultaneously unless something systemic has shifted. That alone raises alarms.

We have gone back to counting stolen children, watching shaky videos of terrified pupils, hearing anguished parents on television, and listening to federal officials who seem permanently shocked into inertia. The déjà vu is unsettling.

This week, armed outlaws stormed a school in Kebbi State and abducted scores of girls in an attack that jolted the national conscience. Only days later, another gang invaded Papiri village in Niger State and snatched schoolchildren who were preparing for early morning classes.

The Niger State raid struck me with personal force because the village head of Papiri is my paternal second cousin. His mother is my father’s first cousin. In Borgu tradition, we’re considered cross cousins and therefore “joking mates.” I have tried to call him since news of the abduction broke without success.

At the same time, Jihadist violence in the northeast has recrudesced with chilling familiarity and renewed virulence. Islamic State West Africa Province and remnants of Boko Haram have regrouped around the Lake Chad basin. They attack civilian communities and security installations with renewed vigor.

From Bama to Marte, villagers describe nightly fear as if nothing has changed since the peak of Boko Haram’s reign a decade ago.

I earned the concentrated wrath of late president Muhammadu Buhari’s devotees in early 2018 when, in a February 24, 2018, column titled “Bursting the Myth of Buhari’s Boko Haram ‘Success’,” I pointed out that Boko Haram appeared to be defeated not because the government had done anything but because the group had been “weakened by an enervatingly bitter and sanguinary internal schism.”

It appears like the group has been able to overcome its internal dissension enough to be able to coordinate attacks on its targets.

Parallel to this resurgence is the evolution of kidnapping into a national business. What started as an insurgent tactic has been copied, refined and monetized by criminal gangs across the northwest and north central then exported to the south.

Independent trackers show that billions of naira have circulated through ransom payments over the past decade with recent reports describing a structured kidnap economy complete with financiers, logistics networks, informants, negotiators and money launderers. What Nigeria once called banditry has now matured into a rational industry with predictable revenue streams and diversified risks.

So, yes, the national atmosphere today resembles the Jonathan years. But this time the crisis is deeper and more dispersed.

The national mood of despair, helplessness and anger is a replay of the late Jonathan era when Boko Haram hoisted its flags over swathes of Borno and Yobe. Chibok became a global shorthand for Nigerian dysfunction. Now, the factually incorrect but emotionally resonant narrative of an exclusively targeted “Christian genocide” that spares Muslims has become the rallying cry to galvanize global attention to Nigeria’s growing insecurity.

Back in 2014, Bola Ahmed Tinubu was the most potent voice of the opposition. He excoriated Goodluck Jonathan for incompetence and indecisiveness, demanded his resignation and insisted that a president who allowed any part of Nigeria to fall under insurgent control had forfeited his legitimacy.

He was not alone. The opposition constructed a political identity around Jonathan’s inability to contain insecurity and many Nigerians embraced that narrative.

Fast-forward to 2025 and the roles have reversed. Tinubu is now president. Yet armed groups have carved out de facto fiefdoms from Sokoto to Zamfara to parts of Niger and Kwara.

Mass abductions of schoolchildren that once symbolized Jonathan’s collapse now occur with increasingly terrifying regularity on Tinubu’s watch.

The same constitutional structure that prevented Jonathan from responding with agility still binds Tinubu. The same centralized federal police that Jonathan could not reform remains unreformed. The same chorus of political rivals calling for resignation is back, this time directed at Tinubu.

To understand why Nigeria is once again trapped in this cycle one must follow the incentives. In 2014 Boko Haram sustained itself through robbery, looting, cattle rustling, bank raids and forced taxation of communities under its control.

Over time, the insurgency splintered. Islamic State West Africa Province emerged as a faction that taxed traders, herders and fishermen around the Lake Chad basin with a degree of predictable order. Boko Haram’s faction retained a chaotic violence that relied on spectacle and terror. Their internal war weakened both sides but did not erase the insurgent social structures that had taken root in northeast Nigeria.

In the northwest a different conflict economy germinated. What began as local clashes between armed herders and farming communities evolved into a sprawling banditry complex. Criminal groups discovered that kidnapping offered more lucrative returns than cattle rustling or territorial raids.

In time, the operations became systematized. Negotiators emerged. Safe houses and holding camps were erected. Ransom payments moved through informal financial channels. Corrupt intermediaries took commissions. A web of collaborators, enablers and silent beneficiaries flourished.

By 2020 analysts described Nigeria’s kidnap economy as a mature market with predictable seasonal variations. When cash became scarce, criminal groups shifted to looting harvests or taxing miners. When security forces pressured one corridor, criminals migrated to neighboring states. When the public grew desensitized to individual abductions, gangs resorted to mass kidnappings to restore bargaining power. The crisis became self-sustaining.

What sustains this national theatre of insecurity is not mysterious. A centralized and lethargic security structure leaves governors unable to respond to emergencies in their own states. Corruption drains operational resources and incentivizes some actors to prolong insecurity.

Youth unemployment in rural belts produces endless recruits for jihadist and bandit networks. Weak intelligence systems and politicized law enforcement create impunity. Communities that cooperate with the state face revenge attacks without reliable protection. Simplistic narratives, whether religious or ethnic, prevent honest diagnosis.

Yet this cycle is not irreversible. Nigeria needs genuine devolution of policing powers so that states can create accountable and competent security forces to supplement federal agencies. The kidnap economy must be treated as a financial crime problem that requires surveillance of ransom flows, rigorous enforcement of anti-money laundering statutes and prosecution of urban collaborators.

The military must purge procurement fraud and prioritize intelligence-driven operations that protect civilians rather than advertise body counts. Schools need real protective infrastructure, not empty safe school pledges. The state must rebuild trust with communities through accountability for abuses and consistent presence rather than episodic raids.

Nigeria also continues to avoid hard but necessary options. One example is the use of foreign military contractors to support counterinsurgency operations. In 2015 Goodluck Jonathan hired South African and Eastern European mercenaries who helped achieve some of the most significant territorial gains against Boko Haram in years.

Muhammadu Buhari cancelled the arrangement out of vain nationalist pride, and the momentum evaporated. Given the scale of today’s threats, Nigeria should reconsider specialized external support with proper oversight. What matters is saving lives, not protecting political egos.

Ten years ago, Nigerians rallied around the simple demand that their children should be safe in school and their villages safe from predation. A decade later, they are repeating the same plea. If it was fair for Tinubu to say in 2014 that no leader should preside over the occupation of Nigerian communities by non-state armed groups, it is fair to say the same to him now.

Nigerians want what they have always deserved, which is a country where sending a child to school is not an act of faith in divine mercy. They want a government that treats mass abduction not as an inconvenient blemish but as an intolerable crisis. They want an end to a nightmare that feels scripted to repeat itself every decade.

This is a pattern that can be broken. Whether it will be is the question that hangs over the republic.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2025/11/nigerias-return-to-2014-nightmare.html

Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 10:16am On Nov 22, 2025
Moral;Be careful what you do or wish for others because it will surely come to hunt you. APC planted these monsters. Today they are untamable.

Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by ebukal67x: 10:17am On Nov 22, 2025
The comment section is a no go area for Kperogi. He will delete every single comment that dares to challenge his warped narrative.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 10:19am On Nov 22, 2025
"Buhari faults clampdown on Boko Haram members" https://www.google.com/amp/s/thenationonlineng.net/buhari-faults-clampdown-on-boko-haram-members/amp/

-"Not all bandits are criminals" - (Governor Matawalle( Former Zamfara State Governor).
https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/more-news/443593-not-all-bandits-are-criminals-zamfara-gov.html

-"Bandits and BH are northern freedom fighters" -(Adamu Garba).
https://gazettengr.com/boko-haram-bandits-are-northern-freedom-fighters-adamu-garba/

-"Not all bandits are criminals" - (Governor Matawalle(-Zamfara).
https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/more-news/443593-not-all-bandits-are-criminals-zamfara-gov.html?tztc=1

-"Amnesty will make Boko Haram fighters useful to the nation" - Shehu Garba(2018).
https://www.thecable.ng/garba-shehu-amnesty-will-make-boko-haram-fighters-useful-nation/amp

-"Bandits are not terrorists because they are not mounting flags or taking territories" - (Lai Mohammed).
http://saharareporters.com/2021/10/18/bandits-have-no-flags-boko-haram-ipob-they-are-simple-criminals%E2%80%94-buhari%E2%80%99s-minister-lai

-"Maj.Gen.Muhammadu Buhari, has criticised the subsequent military offensive against the Boko Haram Islamic sect....

The federal government's action was a gross injustice against the north....."
(A fight against BH terrorists is a fight against the north." ) -Buhari.
https://allafrica.com/stories/201306030384.html

"The Ban/Proscription of Boko Haram is Wrong, Unconstitutional" - Lai Mohammed
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/06/proscribing-boko-haram-ansaru-wrong-says-acn/

-"Bandit terrorists are just common criminals" -(Femi Adeshina).
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.facebook.com/photo.php%3Ffbid%3D3024302077835811%26id%3D1554378488161518%26set%3Da.1608479662751400%26locale%3Dhi_IN&ved=2ahUKEwijlMrlxN2QAxWUV0EAHUQ2DO4QFnoECFkQAQ&usg=AOvVaw1s_bdFjiKYlu0ibXAMHSTx

"Bandits Are Into Business", IPOB Is Calling For War — APC Chief, Igbokwe Defends Government’s Clampdown On Secessionists...."

"Amnesty will make Boko Haram fighters useful to the nation"- Shehu Garba(2018).
https://www.thecable.ng/garba-shehu-amnesty-will-make-boko-haram-fighters-useful-nation/amp

-"Maj.Gen.Muhammadu Buhari, has criticised the subsequent military offensive against the Boko Haram Islamic sect....The federal government's action was a gross injustice against the north....." (A fight against BH terrorists is a fight against the north." ) -Buhari. https://allafrica.com/stories/201306030384.html

Lai Mohammed: Kidnapping, Banditry Not Federal Offences In Nigeria
https://dailypost.ng/2021/05/04/breaking-kidnapping-banditry-not-federal-offences-in-nigeria-buhari-govt/?amp&utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter&__twitter_impression=true

-"How buhari stopped us from fighting Boko Haram” (South African mercenaries).
https://allafrica.com/stories/201811270024.html

"Bandits Are Into Business", IPOB Is Calling For War"; [/b]APC Chief, Igbokwe Defends Government’s Clampdown On Secessionists...."
https://saharareporters.com/2021/07/14/bandits-are-business-ipob-calling-war-%E2%80%94-apc-chief-igbokwe-defends-government%E2%80%99s-clampdown#google_vignette

-[b]"Bandits need to be accommodated with land gift, feted with plenty cash & love."
- (Sheikh Gumi).
https://gazettengr.com/bandits-require-money-land-compensation-to-stop-killings-sheikh-gumi/

-"FG is setting our killers free - soldiers kick as 1,400 Boko Haram suspects are released."
https://www.thecable.ng/fg-is-setting-our-killers-free-soldiers-kick-as-1400-boko-haram-suspects-are-released
https://www.google.com/amp/s/thenationonlineng.net/acn-boko-harams-ban-violates-constitution/amp/

"Terrorists Now Use Walkie-talkie, We Can't Track Them - FG"
https://gazettengr.com/terrorists-now-use-walkie-talkie-we-cant-track-them-space-agency/

Nigerian soldiers not trained to fight bandits, Boko Haram: Chief of Defence
https://gazettengr.com/nigerian-soldiers-not-trained-to-fight-bandits-boko-haram-chief-of-defence/

It Is Not Our Duty To Unravel Boko Haram Sponsors – Military
https://thenationonlineng.net/it-is-not-our-duty-to-unravel-boko-haram-sponsors-military/

Why I Won’t Reveal Sponsors Of Boko Haram, Terrorism— EFCC Boss, Bawa
http://saharareporters.com/2021/09/17/why-i-won%E2%80%99t-reveal-sponsors-boko-haram-terrorism%E2%80%94-anti-graft-agency-efcc-boss-bawa

-"Bandits occupying positions of authority in Nigeria." – El Rufai
https://guardian.ng/news/nigeria/national/bandits-occupying-positions-of-authority-in-nigeria-el-rufai/

-"FG Not Against Bandits Because They Are Doing Business" - ElRufai
https://todaypoliticsng.com/fg-not-going-after-bandits-because-they-are-doing-business-not-secession-like-nnamdi-kanu-el-rufai/

Widows of slain military officers and soldiers particularly those fighting the war against terrorism have protested the continuous release of murderous Boko Haram terrorists on the grounds that they have repented but....wants them punished like other criminals
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/01/widows-of-soldiers-protest-release-of-repentant-boko-haram-terrorists/

But the sitting president said "a fight against BH terrorists is a fight against the North...." while a
Nigerian Army General under the APC government is saying "Boko Haram should lay their arms unconditionally, be accepted in the community and rehabilitated.

An ex Boko Haram having laid his arms stands to be a president of this country. He stands to aspire to any position in this country.

http://igberetvnews.com/838280/just-in-repentant-boko-haram-members-can-become-president-nigerian-army-general/

-"FG Not Interested In Naming, Shaming Terrorism Financiers." - Femi Adesina
https://punchng.com/buhari-govt-not-interested-in-naming-shaming-terrorism-financiers-femi-adesina/?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook#Echobox=1632211497

But when the UAE identified & exposed Nigerian BH terrorist sponsors based in that country, then the terrorist laden government said that the "Nigerians convicted for terrorism in UAE can appeal to Supreme Court" FG
https://www.google.com/amp/s/punchng.com/nigerians-convicted-for-terrorism-in-uae-can-appeal-to-supreme-court-fg/%3famp

-"Nigerian Communities Are Free To Dialogue With Bandits" – Mohammed Abubakar( Defence Minister) https://saharareporters.com/2023/09/26/nigerian-communities-are-free-dialogue-bandits-defence-minister-speaks-zamfara-inciden
"Insecurity; Views of Some Top Nigerian Government Officials."
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by WhizdomXX(m): 10:22am On Nov 22, 2025
Exactly the title of the movie.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by dibunotion(m): 10:22am On Nov 22, 2025
Same story is playing again. Thought I was the only one who noticed. The gimmicks APC used to outset Jonathan has come back to haunt them
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Taich(m): 10:23am On Nov 22, 2025
All these guys gasping from their mouth. Nigerians are not ready for truth. The El rufai and Tinubu’s of 2014 are still same persons. Bring out the Boko haram that you have changed their name to bandits and let them face justice. But I know that will be a crime against Allah according to most northern Muslims.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 10:23am On Nov 22, 2025
Throwback:
A lengthy read but not one solution proferred...
"Nigeria also continues to avoid hard but necessary options. One example is the use of foreign military contractors to support counterinsurgency operations.

In 2015 Goodluck Jonathan hired South African and Eastern European mercenaries who helped achieve some of the most significant territorial gains against Boko Haram in years. Muhammadu Buhari cancelled the arrangement out of vain nationalist pride, and the momentum evaporated.

Given the scale of today’s threats, Nigeria should reconsider specialized external support with proper oversight. What matters is saving lives, not protecting political egos.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nackzy: 10:24am On Nov 22, 2025
Tinubu has failed, Tinubu is the worse Nigeria has ever had
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Druss(m): 10:24am On Nov 22, 2025
Decentralisation of police powers is not the reason why this is happening. Our leaders are not taking this matter seriously.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by emkz:
Who gave the order for security operatives to pull out before the terrorists struck?

Who was responsible for giving withdrawal orders before kidnappers struck in the past?

Let us recall the case of Captain Tijani Balarabe and Wadume. Wadume was arrested by the police and Captain Balarabe broke him out of police custody. Why was a commissioned officer in bed with a kidnapper? Where is Captain Tijani today? Could there be more Captain Tijanis in the security forces?

The neatness of the kidnappings, the zero resistance to kidnapping by security forces, free mingling by terrorists with security forces in Zamfara says that either the terrorists do not fear security agents or the security respect and even fear them.

Why is that the case?

Dear military, in this country, Chadian rebels were chased out of Nigeria by GOC Muhammadu Buhari against presidential command. The rebels never resurfaced. Today, banditry and terrorism have become a profitable business. The security agencies act as if they tolerate it. They never respond on time or suspiciously withdraw before attacks.

State governors, set up your own internal security system. Lagos has Lagos Traffif Management Authority (LASTMA), Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI), Neighbourhood Watch, NURTW (agberos). They also invest in Rapid Response Squad (Tinubu's initiative), and they even launched a security trust fund. Borno has CJTF. Southwest has Amotekun. Set up the same thing. Gather all your retired soldiers and policemen, tell them to come up with a security plan and fund it. Let all nooks and crannies be secured by you. You'd be shocked at how dedicated your own people would be to secure their own land. From Jonathan to Buhari to Tinubu, it is clear that the problem is not changing presidents or service chiefs. The problem is using the same strategy. Change strategy. Use your own internal security arrangements.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by HgAkpobomeEr: 10:27am On Nov 22, 2025
The pattern is indeed breakable, but it requires a collective resolve to do so.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by iwaeda: 10:28am On Nov 22, 2025
Ojumo ti tun mo, we are back to where we left yesterday, with no solution in sight. Those of us supporting evil just for paltry, religious or party affiliation does not know when the next stone will hit. Let us be sincere and build a peaceful nation. Iree oo. grin grin grin grin grin
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by omoredia: 10:28am On Nov 22, 2025
It is the almajiris kids that weren't sent to school 15 to 20 years ago that are these terrorists today.

A terrorist was first a damaged child

Lets not forget how Sultan and northern elites kicked against GEJ building schools for the children in the core north. They knew it wouldn't make children easily brainwashed into the terrorists we have today.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by muykem: 10:29am On Nov 22, 2025
Yes. Fulani militant has taken over everywhere.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by lasdas100(m): 10:29am On Nov 22, 2025
Walai Nigeria is a fail state
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by fredoooooo:
Epe ori igi feeding them the epe they want o hear and leave reality ..
Listen to him very well okay .. it leave reality and satisfy your emotional glory . grin cheesy
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Basicend:
Since Northerners came out and protested against Trump's intervention and the fishing out of the terriorists amongst them, then they should continue closing down all their schools, hostels, churches, hospitals etc.

You guys have ruled the country for decades. Yet, your leaders refused to spread development to the region. Hold your leaders and their ideas accountable. Stop trying to force your way into power after just 3 years.

When you are ready, you will face the siege.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Exceed15: 10:32am On Nov 22, 2025
Tinubu should disgracefully resign
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by fredoooooo:
ebukal67x:
The comment section is a no go area for Kperogi. He will delete every single comment that dares to challenge his warped narrative.
Most of them cant take 1 % of what they dish out .
If you ask a simple question they see it as attack, the same way they attack everything.
Na una dey patronise them sha ..
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by ogolemati: 10:32am On Nov 22, 2025
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy grin na the same people that brought the nightmare still they power .the agbero partners crooks headed by agbero chairman the builder of Lagos State from the sea

Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Iamzik: 10:32am On Nov 22, 2025
ebukal67x:
The comment section is a no go area for Kperogi. He will delete every single comment that dares to challenge his warped narrative.
There is no warped narrative. He is saying the truth and you know it.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Iamzik: 10:33am On Nov 22, 2025
ogolemati:
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy grin na the same people that brought the nightmare still they power .the agbero partners crooks headed by agbero chairman the builder of Lagos State from the sea
Where are the cows...what goes around comes around
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Osariemen12: 10:40am On Nov 22, 2025
Tinubu has failed as a president.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by seunoyeleyep(f): 10:42am On Nov 22, 2025
Kperogi's brothers are on rampage. They cannot all be trusted. All of them.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Fujiyama: 10:44am On Nov 22, 2025
Racoon:
"Insecurity; Views of Some Top Nigerian Government Officials."
^^^
Very useful compilation.
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by Kobicove(m): 10:51am On Nov 22, 2025
This is al you need to know that these incidences appear to be politically motivated because I remember in 2014 during the run up to the general elections when bombs started going off everywhere in the north especially anytime GEJ wanted to go for election campaigns undecided

Anyway APC is being paid back in their own coin, it is just unfortunate that innocent citizens are paying for it with their lives
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by BarrElChapo(m): 10:55am On Nov 22, 2025
“Back in 2014, Bola Ahmed Tinubu was the most potent voice of the opposition. He excoriated Goodluck Jonathan for incompetence and indecisiveness, demanded his resignation and insisted that a president who allowed any part of Nigeria to fall under insurgent control had forfeited his legitimacy.

He was not alone. The opposition constructed a political identity around Jonathan’s inability to contain insecurity and many Nigerians embraced that narrative.

Fast-forward to 2025 and the roles have reversed. Tinubu is now president. Yet armed groups have carved out de facto fiefdoms from Sokoto to Zamfara to parts of Niger and Kwara.”


Emilokan Emilokan yet no sense and no brain for governance, just Emilokan!
Re: Nigeria’s Return To The 2014 Nightmare By Farooq A. Kperogi by stuffs2002: 10:56am On Nov 22, 2025
May God protect and return Nigeria back to a peaceful country
1 2 3 Reply

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