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Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Wisdomkosi(op): 4:53pm On Mar 29
Tinubu at 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership, Renewed Hope Agenda

Rt Hon. Engr. Chinedum T. Orji, former Speaker of the Abia State House of Assembly and Abia State City Boy Movement Patron, has extended warm congratulations to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, on the occasion of his 74th birthday, describing him as a visionary leader and consummate statesman.

In a statement issued to mark the significant milestone, the former Speaker commended President Tinubu's unwavering commitment to democratic governance and national development, noting that his leadership continues to inspire hope across the country.

"The President's bold reform initiatives and steadfast pursuit of policies aimed at repositioning Nigeria for sustainable economic growth and shared prosperity are commendable," Rt Hon. Orji stated.

According to him, President Tinubu's Renewed Hope Agenda reflects a clear determination to address longstanding national challenges while laying a solid foundation for a more resilient and prosperous Nigeria.

"The President's leadership has continued to demonstrate courage, foresight, and a deep sense of responsibility to the Nigerian people," the former Speaker added.

Rt Hon. Orji further lauded the President's lifelong dedication to public service, emphasizing that his contributions to nation-building and democratic consolidation remain invaluable and worthy of emulation.

"His contributions to nation-building and democratic consolidation remain invaluable and worthy of emulation," he said.

As President Tinubu marks his 74th birthday, Rt Hon. Orji prayed for Almighty God to grant him continued good health, divine wisdom, and renewed strength to lead the nation to greater heights.

"I pray for Almighty God to grant him continued good health, divine wisdom, and renewed strength to lead the nation to greater heights," Orji said.

He reaffirmed his support and that of his associates for the administration's efforts to deliver on its mandate and advance the collective aspirations of Nigerians.

"I reaffirm my support and that of my associates for the administration's efforts to deliver on its mandate and advance the collective aspirations of Nigerians," the statement concluded.
Source : https://igberetvnews.com/1493546/tinubu-74-former-abia-speaker-chinedu-orji-hails-visionary-leadership-renewed-hope-agenda/

Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Kosiso12(f):
Happy Birthday to a great man.

Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by fredoooooo: 6:27pm On Mar 29
Asiwaju of the whole federation..
Ekun oko oluremi , Arabambi Baba seyi ..
Tulaaasssi laaafi feran Sango ...
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by MaziObinnaokija: 6:28pm On Mar 29
cool man wey sabi him Elder and papa
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by HacheNoire: 6:28pm On Mar 29
God bless Rt Hon. Engr. Chinedum T. Orji

God bless Abia State

God bless His Excellency, President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu (GCFR)
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by AdolfHitlerxXx: 6:31pm On Mar 29
There are noisemakers ONLINE.

OFFLINE, their leaders must bow in respect to those ALWAYS above them grin
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by chucks185: 6:32pm On Mar 29
HacheNoire:
God bless Rt Hon. Engr. Chinedum T. Orji

God bless Abia State

God bless His Excellency, President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu (GCFR)
God punish corrupt and old politicians who want to steal the future of their children children
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by FatimaAbubakar(f): 6:35pm On Mar 29
There's nothing visionary about Gbola Tinumbu. He's just a shameless thief and a political fraudster. The praise singer himself is also a political fraudster.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Image123(m): 6:36pm On Mar 29
Again, Happy birthday to our own President Bola Jagaban Tinubu. Who God has blessed.

Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Nextjs: 6:40pm On Mar 29
Thievery everywhere.

Those that destroyed abia
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Ushame: 6:40pm On Mar 29
Only politicians enjoy the elation...

While the masses are complaining
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by IyaTola: 6:41pm On Mar 29
Every Nigerian doesn’t need graphs or statistics to know something is wrong with the economy—we are living it.

Take the woman selling frozen fish in my neighbourhood. Before the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, she could afford to buy three or four cartons every morning. Her business was stable. She had confidence—confidence that she would sell, restock, and still have something left to take home.

Today, that same woman struggles to buy even one carton. Not because she has become lazy or careless, but because the cost of fuel, transportation, and goods has risen beyond her reach. She now dips into her savings just to stay in business. And even then, profit is no longer guaranteed—it is survival.

And her story is not isolated.

Parents now stand in markets calculating what to remove from their shopping list, not what to add. Meals are reduced, not out of choice, but necessity. School fees have become a burden heavier than ever, forcing difficult conversations at home—some children are asked to wait, others quietly drop out.

Students feel it too. Transport fares have doubled or tripled, making it harder to attend lectures regularly. Feeding has become a daily struggle. What used to last a week now disappears in days. The focus is no longer just on education, but on how to endure.

For employed Nigerians, salaries remain the same while everything else rises. The money that once covered rent, food, and small comforts now barely lasts the month. There is a constant pressure—a silent anxiety that follows them to work and back home.

For the unemployed, the situation is even harsher. Job opportunities are scarce, and the cost of even searching for work—printing CVs, transportation, data—is rising. Hope begins to feel expensive.

Business owners, especially small traders, are squeezed from all sides. Higher fuel prices mean higher transportation costs, which means higher prices for goods—but customers can’t afford those prices. So sales drop. Businesses shrink. Some close entirely.

And the elderly—those who should be resting after years of labor—are forced to stretch limited pensions or depend more heavily on struggling family members. Their dignity is quietly eroded by rising costs they cannot control.

This is what people mean when they say the economy is “bad.” It is not theory. It is not statistics. It is the daily reality of Nigerians measuring their income in real terms—what it can actually buy—and realizing it buys less and less.

That is a language everyone understands.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Habib101: 6:46pm On Mar 29
This man at 74 but his body is saying 80 please can you balance this for me
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Nwaikpe: 6:48pm On Mar 29
74 how many times?

Is this not the tenth time?

grin grin grin
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Nwaikpe: 6:49pm On Mar 29
That is because yuor hands has been scrolling on your phones since in the morning.

Let the hands be busy with valuable work,
The intestines will be full.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Klington: 6:49pm On Mar 29
A failure is visionary to only sycophants.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by ZombieTERROR: 6:50pm On Mar 29
Visionary leader spreading insecurity


what a loser
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by jookco(m): 6:51pm On Mar 29
One criminal hailing the father of all criminals
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by ogolemati: 6:53pm On Mar 29
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin na only demon possessed individuals saw agbero chairman as visionary leader .like wait how is agbero chairman visionary when he has not fulfilled any of his promises to his touts from Lagos state

Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by ebuk4real(m): 6:54pm On Mar 29
Thieves celebrating thieves. They know themselves, plus their slaves here too
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by gabby69(m): 6:55pm On Mar 29
Long Life My President ❤

God Bless The Republic Of Nigeria 🇳🇬
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by SmartPolician: 6:58pm On Mar 29
If visionary leadership is now associated with Tinubu, then that phrase now has another meaning
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Achor1111(m): 7:09pm On Mar 29
Mumu man, why won't him hail Tinubu, after him and his father destroyed Abia.
I spit on him !
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Alikoooooooooo: 7:24pm On Mar 29
chucks185:
God punish corrupt and old politicians who want to steal the future of their children children
Amen. Amen ..God Bless PO. PO is our choice
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Alikoooooooooo: 7:27pm On Mar 29
IyaTola:
Every Nigerian doesn’t need graphs or statistics to know something is wrong with the economy—we are living it.

Take the woman selling frozen fish in my neighbourhood. Before the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, she could afford to buy three or four cartons every morning. Her business was stable. She had confidence—confidence that she would sell, restock, and still have something left to take home.

Today, that same woman struggles to buy even one carton. Not because she has become lazy or careless, but because the cost of fuel, transportation, and goods has risen beyond her reach. She now dips into her savings just to stay in business. And even then, profit is no longer guaranteed—it is survival.

And her story is not isolated.

Parents now stand in markets calculating what to remove from their shopping list, not what to add. Meals are reduced, not out of choice, but necessity. School fees have become a burden heavier than ever, forcing difficult conversations at home—some children are asked to wait, others quietly drop out.

Students feel it too. Transport fares have doubled or tripled, making it harder to attend lectures regularly. Feeding has become a daily struggle. What used to last a week now disappears in days. The focus is no longer just on education, but on how to endure.

For employed Nigerians, salaries remain the same while everything else rises. The money that once covered rent, food, and small comforts now barely lasts the month. There is a constant pressure—a silent anxiety that follows them to work and back home.

For the unemployed, the situation is even harsher. Job opportunities are scarce, and the cost of even searching for work—printing CVs, transportation, data—is rising. Hope begins to feel expensive.

Business owners, especially small traders, are squeezed from all sides. Higher fuel prices mean higher transportation costs, which means higher prices for goods—but customers can’t afford those prices. So sales drop. Businesses shrink. Some close entirely.

And the elderly—those who should be resting after years of labor—are forced to stretch limited pensions or depend more heavily on struggling family members. Their dignity is quietly eroded by rising costs they cannot control.

This is what people mean when they say the economy is “bad.” It is not theory. It is not statistics. It is the daily reality of Nigerians measuring their income in real terms—what it can actually buy—and realizing it buys less and less.

That is a language everyone understands.
People like you should be at the helm of Affairs. These your Words are like Sun shine
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Alikoooooooooo: 7:29pm On Mar 29
IyaTola:
Every Nigerian doesn’t need graphs or statistics to know something is wrong with the economy—we are living it.

Take the woman selling frozen fish in my neighbourhood. Before the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, she could afford to buy three or four cartons every morning. Her business was stable. She had confidence—confidence that she would sell, restock, and still have something left to take home.

Today, that same woman struggles to buy even one carton. Not because she has become lazy or careless, but because the cost of fuel, transportation, and goods has risen beyond her reach. She now dips into her savings just to stay in business. And even then, profit is no longer guaranteed—it is survival.

And her story is not isolated.

Parents now stand in markets calculating what to remove from their shopping list, not what to add. Meals are reduced, not out of choice, but necessity. School fees have become a burden heavier than ever, forcing difficult conversations at home—some children are asked to wait, others quietly drop out.

Students feel it too. Transport fares have doubled or tripled, making it harder to attend lectures regularly. Feeding has become a daily struggle. What used to last a week now disappears in days. The focus is no longer just on education, but on how to endure.

For employed Nigerians, salaries remain the same while everything else rises. The money that once covered rent, food, and small comforts now barely lasts the month. There is a constant pressure—a silent anxiety that follows them to work and back home.

For the unemployed, the situation is even harsher. Job opportunities are scarce, and the cost of even searching for work—printing CVs, transportation, data—is rising. Hope begins to feel expensive.

Business owners, especially small traders, are squeezed from all sides. Higher fuel prices mean higher transportation costs, which means higher prices for goods—but customers can’t afford those prices. So sales drop. Businesses shrink. Some close entirely.

And the elderly—those who should be resting after years of labor—are forced to stretch limited pensions or depend more heavily on struggling family members. Their dignity is quietly eroded by rising costs they cannot control.

This is what people mean when they say the economy is “bad.” It is not theory. It is not statistics. It is the daily reality of Nigerians measuring their income in real terms—what it can actually buy—and realizing it buys less and less.

That is a language everyone understands.
Please Copy these Words of yours and paste on all your handles you can even do a video by allowing ai to do the talking. Wole Soyinka or Gani Fawehinmi could not have said it better.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by oshkoach: 7:45pm On Mar 29
It’s a shame that a single man was allowed to destroy the institution of a party known as PDP.

It’s a shame Wike was allowed to destroy PDP.

PDP, a party that ushered this democratic dispensation that we all enjoy of which APC is a beneficiary.

PDP nurtured democracy in Nigeria.
I feel so ashamed to be a citizen of this country.
If we can allow a single man destroy an institution then we are all doomed.

As for Wike, posterity will judge you.

Shame on this country and its leaders. Shame on Wike and his cohorts.
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by olabrad: 7:59pm On Mar 29
I dare Tinubu to go for bone density test to properly access his age.

I won't be surprised if he is just few years younger than Obj or even Obj age mate
Re: Tinubu At 74: Former Abia Speaker, Chinedum Orji, Hails Visionary Leadership by Nobody: 8:14pm On Mar 29
IyaTola:
Every Nigerian doesn’t need graphs or statistics to know something is wrong with the economy—we are living it.

Take the woman selling frozen fish in my neighbourhood. Before the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, she could afford to buy three or four cartons every morning. Her business was stable. She had confidence—confidence that she would sell, restock, and still have something left to take home.

Today, that same woman struggles to buy even one carton. Not because she has become lazy or careless, but because the cost of fuel, transportation, and goods has risen beyond her reach. She now dips into her savings just to stay in business. And even then, profit is no longer guaranteed—it is survival.

And her story is not isolated.

Parents now stand in markets calculating what to remove from their shopping list, not what to add. Meals are reduced, not out of choice, but necessity. School fees have become a burden heavier than ever, forcing difficult conversations at home—some children are asked to wait, others quietly drop out.

Students feel it too. Transport fares have doubled or tripled, making it harder to attend lectures regularly. Feeding has become a daily struggle. What used to last a week now disappears in days. The focus is no longer just on education, but on how to endure.

For employed Nigerians, salaries remain the same while everything else rises. The money that once covered rent, food, and small comforts now barely lasts the month. There is a constant pressure—a silent anxiety that follows them to work and back home.

For the unemployed, the situation is even harsher. Job opportunities are scarce, and the cost of even searching for work—printing CVs, transportation, data—is rising. Hope begins to feel expensive.

Business owners, especially small traders, are squeezed from all sides. Higher fuel prices mean higher transportation costs, which means higher prices for goods—but customers can’t afford those prices. So sales drop. Businesses shrink. Some close entirely.

And the elderly—those who should be resting after years of labor—are forced to stretch limited pensions or depend more heavily on struggling family members. Their dignity is quietly eroded by rising costs they cannot control.

This is what people mean when they say the economy is “bad.” It is not theory. It is not statistics. It is the daily reality of Nigerians measuring their income in real terms—what it can actually buy—and realizing it buys less and less.

That is a language everyone understands.
May God bless you 🙏
Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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