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Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by ogododo(op): 7:05am On Apr 18
Intra-state cultural and subregional tensions are building up in Kwara State ahead of the 2027 governorship elections because of credible worries that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s all-too-well-known Yoruba nationalist agenda is about to upend the state’s harmony through candidate imposition.

First, some background. Like several states in the country, Kwara is a multi-ethnic and multicultural state. It’s customary to divide it into three distinct geo-cultural zones. There is Kwara Central, which encompasses all of Ilorin and its adjoining areas. It’s linguistically Yoruba but ethnically a mixed bag of people who trace ancestry to Yoruba, Fulani, Kanuri, Baatonu (or Bariba), Hausa, and Nupe ancestors but who are, for all practical purposes, Yoruba. It is a little over 6 percent of the state’s landmass but constitutes 38 percent of the state’s population.

Then there is Kwara South, the most ethnically homogeneous part of the state, which is wholly Yoruba and, in many ways, culturally and linguistically indistinguishable from the Southwest. It is a little over 18 percent of the state’s landmass and 30 percent of its population.

Kwara North is the most ethnically diverse geo-cultural region and is peopled by the Baatonu (or Bariba), Bokobaru, Nupe, and Fulani. It is the non-Yoruba-speaking part of the state that constitutes more than 75 percent of the state’s landmass and 32 percent of its population, although Moro, a small part of Ilorin Emirate, was mysteriously grafted onto Kwara North. Nonetheless, the Nupe, Fulani, Baatonu, and Bokobaru people are culturally closer to the far North than they are to any part of the state.

Since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, Kwara Central, that is, Ilorin Emirate, has dominated the governorship of the state. By the time of the next governorship election in 2027, Kwara Central would have ruled for 20 out of 28 years.

Kwara South produced the governor for eight years, from 2011 to 2019. Abdulfatah Ahmed, from Ifelodun Local Government, is from Kwara South.

But the entirety of Kwara North has never produced a governor for even a day since 1999, and only for a year and 10 months since 1992.

Kwara State governor Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq, from all indications, is committed to course correction in 2027 by supporting a rotation of power to Kwara North. A news report I read said he is lending support to Yakubu Danladi Salihu, the Speaker of the Kwara State House of Assembly, who is from Baruten, the second-largest local government in the country, to succeed him. It may not be true, but it has crystallized in public perception.

Senator Sadiq Suleiman Umar, who represents Kwara North in the Senate and who is from Kaiama, is another contender who enjoys widespread support to succeed Abdulrazaq. Both Baruten and Kaiama used to be part of Borgu Local Government before one half of it was ceded to Niger State in the early 1990s.

Yet although consensus, even among prominent players in Ilorin, appears to be coalescing around the idea that the remnant of Borgu in Kwara State, that is, Baruten and Kaiama, should produce the next governor (because the Nupe briefly produced a governor in the aborted Third Republic), it is said that President Tinubu insists that a Yoruba person from Kwara South must be governor.

Widespread whispers indicate that Tinubu’s preference for Abdulrahman’s successor is a certain Bashir Omolaja Bolarinwa, who hails from the same local government as former governor Ahmed and used to be a local government chairman in Lagos.

A self-described “Yoruba irredentist” who has privileged access to people in Tinubu’s inner circle told me a few days ago that Tinubu wants to use his presidency to advance his sense of a pan-Yoruba agenda and be seen as the reincarnation of Oduduwa.

To that end, he said, Tinubu wants to force the election of “Yoruba” governors in Kwara and Kogi states. Since I didn’t listen in on any conversation where Tinubu said this, I can’t be certain that it’s entirely true, but given what I have described as Tinubu’s studied “Visibilization of Northern Yorubas” in my October 11, 2025, column, it would not surprise me if it were true.

But it would be a grave error of judgment to railroad Yoruba governors in multi-ethnic states, particularly in Kwara State. First, as I have pointed out, a person from Kwara South has been governor for eight years.

Second, Mohammed Lawal, Kwara’s first governor in the Fourth Republic, although from Ilorin, self-identified as Yoruba and performed many symbolic acts to signal that.

In fact, Governor Abdulrazaq, although a cosmopolitan person who seems to transcend ethnic and religious boundaries, is Yoruba. At least that was what one Sheikh Abdulrahim Aduranigba said seven years ago when he contrasted him with the PDP candidate for the governorship election.

“We have adopted Abdulrazaq as our governorship candidate because he is a Yoruba, and we have instructed him to conduct his campaigns in Yoruba language,” THISDAY quoted him as saying. “The PDP candidate is Fulani, and we challenge him to conduct his campaigns in Fulani language.”

In other words, the Yoruba are not a marginal group in Kwara that need saving by a reincarnated Oduduwa. The people who need “saving” are the non-Yoruba-speaking people of the state who have never produced a governor.

Third, the pushback that the imposition of a governor on account of his ethnic identity would invite could plunge the state into crisis. Ilorin people will resist it. People in Kwara North will resist it, and it will cause needless friction with the south of the state.

Interestingly, Tinubu’s second most prominent traditional title after “Asiwaju” is “Jagaban Borgu.” Kwara’s Kaiama and Baruten local governments, which have never produced a governor for the state since its founding in 1967, are one half of Borgu. It would be ironic if the champion of Borgu (that’s what Jagaban Borgu means) champions the political exclusion of the people he is symbolically supposed to lead and protect.Politics

Tinubu himself is president because of a deliberate policy of positive political discrimination called power rotation, and he is anchoring his reelection on the basis that the South must complete its eight years, like the North before it.

As I have repeatedly pointed out, political representation at the highest levels is more symbolism than substance. Although the nature of ethnocratic governance we call democracy ensures that people in positions of power give preferential treatment to their kind and places of origin, for the most part, all politicians are the same. They first take care of themselves, their families, friends, and associates before the crumbs spread to their “people.”

Yet political representation is the symbolic conduit through which people vicariously connect with governments. When people of Ayetoro Gbede demonstrated the other day, telling Nigerians to leave their “son” Joash Amupitan alone, even though his past tweets question his neutrality and therefore his suitability as INEC chairman, I understood where they were coming from. He is the symbolic conduit through which they connect to the government. Ours is an ethnocracy, not a democracy.

That’s why it’s my long-term belief that the surest way to sustain the form of government we practice now is to deepen and constitutionalize representational equity. No ethnic group should dominate leadership because it has profound implications for psychic exclusion and the predilection to violence.

Baruten, Kaiama, Patigi, and Edu local governments, the non-Yoruba-speaking local governments in the state, are some of the least developed and most backward places in Nigeria. The first roads were tarred in Baruten only a little over a decade ago, and they are already death traps. Most towns are not connected to the national grid, and healthcare is among the worst.

A governor from the area will be compelled by ethnocratic pressures to attend to the most egregious infrastructural deficits that previous governments overlooked.

Let me end with a full disclosure: I am from Baruten Local Government of Kwara State and therefore from “Kwara North.” But my concerns are located in my broader concerns about representational justice, about which I have written in regard to other parts of the country.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/04/tinubus-yoruba-agenda-risks-deep.html?m=1

Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Anguldi(m): 7:51am On Apr 18
ogododo:
Intra-state cultural and subregional tensions are building up in Kwara State ahead of the 2027 governorship elections because of credible worries that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s all-too-well-known Yoruba nationalist agenda is about to upend the state’s harmony through candidate imposition.


First, some background. Like several states in the country, Kwara is a multi-ethnic and multicultural state. It’s customary to divide it into three distinct geo-cultural zones. There is Kwara Central, which encompasses all of Ilorin and its adjoining areas. It’s linguistically Yoruba but ethnically a mixed bag of people who trace ancestry to Yoruba, Fulani, Kanuri, Baatonu (or Bariba), Hausa, and Nupe ancestors but who are, for all practical purposes, Yoruba. It is a little over 6 percent of the state’s landmass but constitutes 38 percent of the state’s population.

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Then there is Kwara South, the most ethnically homogeneous part of the state, which is wholly Yoruba and, in many ways, culturally and linguistically indistinguishable from the Southwest. It is a little over 18 percent of the state’s landmass and 30 percent of its population.

Kwara North is the most ethnically diverse geo-cultural region and is peopled by the Baatonu (or Bariba), Bokobaru, Nupe, and Fulani. It is the non-Yoruba-speaking part of the state that constitutes more than 75 percent of the state’s landmass and 32 percent of its population, although Moro, a small part of Ilorin Emirate, was mysteriously grafted onto Kwara North. Nonetheless, the Nupe, Fulani, Baatonu, and Bokobaru people are culturally closer to the far North than they are to any part of the state.


Since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, Kwara Central, that is, Ilorin Emirate, has dominated the governorship of the state. By the time of the next governorship election in 2027, Kwara Central would have ruled for 20 out of 28 years.

Kwara South produced the governor for eight years, from 2011 to 2019. Abdulfatah Ahmed, from Ifelodun Local Government, is from Kwara South.

But the entirety of Kwara North has never produced a governor for even a day since 1999, and only for a year and 10 months since 1992.

Kwara State governor Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq, from all indications, is committed to course correction in 2027 by supporting a rotation of power to Kwara North. A news report I read said he is lending support to Yakubu Danladi Salihu, the Speaker of the Kwara State House of Assembly, who is from Baruten, the second-largest local government in the country, to succeed him. It may not be true, but it has crystallized in public perception.

Senator Sadiq Suleiman Umar, who represents Kwara North in the Senate and who is from Kaiama, is another contender who enjoys widespread support to succeed Abdulrazaq. Both Baruten and Kaiama used to be part of Borgu Local Government before one half of it was ceded to Niger State in the early 1990s.

Yet although consensus, even among prominent players in Ilorin, appears to be coalescing around the idea that the remnant of Borgu in Kwara State, that is, Baruten and Kaiama, should produce the next governor (because the Nupe briefly produced a governor in the aborted Third Republic), it is said that President Tinubu insists that a Yoruba person from Kwara South must be governor.

Widespread whispers indicate that Tinubu’s preference for Abdulrahman’s successor is a certain Bashir Omolaja Bolarinwa, who hails from the same local government as former governor Ahmed and used to be a local government chairman in Lagos.

A self-described “Yoruba irredentist” who has privileged access to people in Tinubu’s inner circle told me a few days ago that Tinubu wants to use his presidency to advance his sense of a pan-Yoruba agenda and be seen as the reincarnation of Oduduwa.

To that end, he said, Tinubu wants to force the election of “Yoruba” governors in Kwara and Kogi states. Since I didn’t listen in on any conversation where Tinubu said this, I can’t be certain that it’s entirely true, but given what I have described as Tinubu’s studied “Visibilization of Northern Yorubas” in my October 11, 2025, column, it would not surprise me if it were true.

But it would be a grave error of judgment to railroad Yoruba governors in multi-ethnic states, particularly in Kwara State. First, as I have pointed out, a person from Kwara South has been governor for eight years.


Second, Mohammed Lawal, Kwara’s first governor in the Fourth Republic, although from Ilorin, self-identified as Yoruba and performed many symbolic acts to signal that.

In fact, Governor Abdulrazaq, although a cosmopolitan person who seems to transcend ethnic and religious boundaries, is Yoruba. At least that was what one Sheikh Abdulrahim Aduranigba said seven years ago when he contrasted him with the PDP candidate for the governorship election.

“We have adopted Abdulrazaq as our governorship candidate because he is a Yoruba, and we have instructed him to conduct his campaigns in Yoruba language,” THISDAY quoted him as saying. “The PDP candidate is Fulani, and we challenge him to conduct his campaigns in Fulani language.”

In other words, the Yoruba are not a marginal group in Kwara that need saving by a reincarnated Oduduwa. The people who need “saving” are the non-Yoruba-speaking people of the state who have never produced a governor.

Third, the pushback that the imposition of a governor on account of his ethnic identity would invite could plunge the state into crisis. Ilorin people will resist it. People in Kwara North will resist it, and it will cause needless friction with the south of the state.

Interestingly, Tinubu’s second most prominent traditional title after “Asiwaju” is “Jagaban Borgu.” Kwara’s Kaiama and Baruten local governments, which have never produced a governor for the state since its founding in 1967, are one half of Borgu. It would be ironic if the champion of Borgu (that’s what Jagaban Borgu means) champions the political exclusion of the people he is symbolically supposed to lead and protect.Politics

Tinubu himself is president because of a deliberate policy of positive political discrimination called power rotation, and he is anchoring his reelection on the basis that the South must complete its eight years, like the North before it.

As I have repeatedly pointed out, political representation at the highest levels is more symbolism than substance. Although the nature of ethnocratic governance we call democracy ensures that people in positions of power give preferential treatment to their kind and places of origin, for the most part, all politicians are the same. They first take care of themselves, their families, friends, and associates before the crumbs spread to their “people.”

Yet political representation is the symbolic conduit through which people vicariously connect with governments. When people of Ayetoro Gbede demonstrated the other day, telling Nigerians to leave their “son” Joash Amupitan alone, even though his past tweets question his neutrality and therefore his suitability as INEC chairman, I understood where they were coming from. He is the symbolic conduit through which they connect to the government. Ours is an ethnocracy, not a democracy.

That’s why it’s my long-term belief that the surest way to sustain the form of government we practice now is to deepen and constitutionalize representational equity. No ethnic group should dominate leadership because it has profound implications for psychic exclusion and the predilection to violence.

Baruten, Kaiama, Patigi, and Edu local governments, the non-Yoruba-speaking local governments in the state, are some of the least developed and most backward places in Nigeria. The first roads were tarred in Baruten only a little over a decade ago, and they are already death traps. Most towns are not connected to the national grid, and healthcare is among the worst.

A governor from the area will be compelled by ethnocratic pressures to attend to the most egregious infrastructural deficits that previous governments overlooked.

Let me end with a full disclosure: I am from Baruten Local Government of Kwara State and therefore from “Kwara North.” But my concerns are located in my broader concerns about representational justice, about which I have written in regard to other parts of the country.

https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/04/tinubus-yoruba-agenda-risks-deep.html?m=1
Kwara is very large and needs a governor to attend to the infrastructural shortfalls like roads and electricity. That's why bandit terrorist extremist have taken over🤷🏿
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Manfromlasvegas(m): 8:02am On Apr 18
By God, the black man will always be the black man. In an ever progressive world, he continues to put, against reason, race, tribe, religion, everything else in the forefront other than competence.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by nairavsdollars(f): 8:32am On Apr 18
Tinubu can only be reelected if the northerners won't vote.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by ChiefOloye(m): 8:48am On Apr 18
nairavsdollars:
Tinubu can only be reelected if the northerners won't vote.
We shall see! Asiwaju will "win" and nothing will happen that has never happened. This is not 2015. Whoever do anyhow will see anyhow.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Racoon(m): 9:21am On Apr 18
Emilokan agbero gangsterism politics of enforcing the only baba soope mentality.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by WizardOfNG:
ChiefOloye:
We shall see! Asiwaju will "win" and nothing will happen that has never happened. This is not 2015. Whoever do anyhow will see anyhow.
Crucial for Tinubu to win in 2027 and continue with reforms. Anyone who genuinely loves Nigeria knows that PBAT till 2031 is guaranteed.

No coup, whether Military, civilian or political, can succeed against PBAT as I believe his path is righteous and just. God will always strengthen his hands.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Christistruth00: 9:34am On Apr 18
It is the Fulani Bandits killings that are causing serious tensions in Kwara and Kogi and it is affecting everyone

There was already a 200 year old issue on ground in Ilorin before the Bandits made matters worse and reawakened History

They went way too far when they started entering into churches to shoot and kidnap people
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by esnbrutality: 9:34am On Apr 18
Just imagine...how religious you have become by supporting a failure in both spirit and the physical.

Tinubu is an OTP and absolutely nothing can stop it. When time reach enter road with your useless protests, that is when you will see anger unleashed on you failures. grin



WizardOfNG:
Crucial for Tinubu to win in 2027 and continue with reforms. Anyone who genuinely loves Nigeria knows that. PBAT till 2031 is guaranteed.

No coup, whether Military, civilian or political, can succeed against PBAT as I believe his path is righteous and just. God will always strengthen his hands.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by lawani(m):
A non Yoruba has been governor in Kwara but not during this dispensation and they will still be governor
Ilorin is not an ethnic mix more than Ilesa or Ibadan or Kano
The ethnic groups in Kwara North actually need to have their own state that they control which they can then align as they wish but those ethnic groups don't control 75 percent of landmass because parts of southern Niger contain towns that are under the king of Jebba so if South Niger is Yoruba land how can those ethnic groups control up to 75 percent of Kwara land mass? What they control is the northwestern part of the state which can't be up to 75 percent of the landmass
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by seunmsg(m): 9:50am On Apr 18
Kwara needs liberation from Fulani terrorists and hegemonists. The liberation will start in 2027. Supporters of terrorism can keep writing trash all over the place, it won’t change God’s plan for the liberation of Kwara state. 2027 is the time for real Kwarans to takeover their state. Nothing shall stop them.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by PlasmaTV: 9:58am On Apr 18
Interesting article.
Kwara has had its share of very bad leaders.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by ogododo(op): 10:43am On Apr 18
Nawa Nlfpmod.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Slippy: 12:26pm On Apr 18
Tinubu has nothing to offer except Yoruba ethnocentrism

Nothing....No national agenda...No plans

None whatsoever
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by fredoooooo:
Which Agenda you epe origi dey support ? ..
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by temmyyem: 12:28pm On Apr 18
Nonsense, talk about the people of Nigeria being killed on daily basis by govt sponsored bandits . What does an average Yoruba person benefits from Tinubu?

Who cares who the president of Nigeria is? The politicians only care about the destruction of the people in respective of the tribe or religion.

The Most High judgement is not far away from those who have shields the blood of our people.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by PlayerMeji: 12:29pm On Apr 18
7 speculation over speculation
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by iwaeda: 12:29pm On Apr 18
Tinubu wants to continue his fiefdom like he did in Lagos. He tried with Lai Mohammed, he failed. Hope you Kwarans are opening your eyes and brain. Semi educated governor has pushed you down. Kperogi is wrong, Megida, Ahmed is from Shaare, Ifelodun, while Bolarinwa is from Omu-Aran, Irepodun and he was former Mainland Chairman, Ebute-Metta. grin grin grin grin grin
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Slippy:
Manfromlasvegas:
By God, the black man will always be the black man. In an ever progressive world, he continues to put, against reason, race, tribe, religion, everything else in the forefront other than competence.
E reach your tribe turn you come get sense cheesy grin
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Slippy: 12:31pm On Apr 18
WizardOfNG:
Crucial for Tinubu to win in 2027 and continue with reforms. Anyone who genuinely loves Nigeria knows that PBAT till 2031 is guaranteed.

No coup, whether Military, civilian or political, can succeed against PBAT as I believe his path is righteous and just. God will always strengthen his hands.
He is not God. Hand go touch am and nothing y'all can do

As it was in 1993 so shall it be in 2027 grin grin
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by hakeem77: 12:32pm On Apr 18
Your writeup will rather cause more disharmony than the alleged Tinubu actions
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Slippy: 12:32pm On Apr 18
ChiefOloye:
We shall see! Asiwaju will "win" and nothing will happen that has never happened. This is not 2015. Whoever do anyhow will see anyhow.
What of 1993 ? what did you do then ? and what will you differently in 2027 ? grin
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by CommonSense1967: 12:33pm On Apr 18
This clownish no value unknown lecturer has written another trashy article for his emergency lover. Trash in trash out.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by WizardOfNG: 12:33pm On Apr 18
Slippy:
He is not God. Hand go touch am and nothing y'all can do

As it was in 1993 so shall it be in 2027 grin grin
Your post reminds me of the saying "if wishes were Horses beggars would ride". 😎
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Real2088: 12:34pm On Apr 18
Very Soon if most Yoruba's keep keeping their eyes close,Kwara will be a state out children will only read on paper
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Slippy: 12:36pm On Apr 18
WizardOfNG:
Your post reminds me of the saying "if wishes were Horses beggars would ride". 😎
Your Yoruba tin god no do reach Abacha. How did Abacha end up ?? cheesy grin
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by MEGAWATCH: 12:38pm On Apr 18
They can't do any shit....


It was out of their foolishness that the Fulanis took over Kwara and there's nothing they can ever do about it.

That's the price of cowardice.


🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Tjra: 12:40pm On Apr 18
This Kperogi and his Fulani agenda writings ehn
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by benardtotti(m): 12:42pm On Apr 18
ogododo:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/04/tinubus-yoruba-agenda-risks-deep.html?m=1
So the writer doesn't mind a failure like abdulrazak to determine the next failure as governor? Instead of picking based on merits?

I have said it several times an average Nigerian is really not interested in development but rather in having his favourite wether based on tribe or religion to be in office .
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Klington: 12:42pm On Apr 18
Tinubu is a president of particular concern.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Sirjamo: 12:42pm On Apr 18
Despite being one of the 3 major ethnic groups in Kogi, Yoruba has never produced the governor

Hausas have never produced the governors in Plateau and Taraba

Igala have never produced the governor in Enugu

Idoma have never produced the governor in Benue

What everyone has been doing since 1900, if Yoruba do it in 2016, they will call it tribalism.

The era of gaslighting us with tribalism tag is over. You all did it to our parents, we will not allow that history to repeat itself.

We embrace tribalism with our full chest.
Bashir Bolarinwa will be governor of Kwara and nothing una papa go do.
Re: Tinubu’s Yoruba Agenda Risks Deep Rupture In Kwara-Kperogi by Awoleesu(m):
I don't understand Kperoogi's mathematics here:

Kwara Central - 38%
Kwara South -30%
Kwara North - 75%?! shocked
Total. - 143!
Are we still talking about "percentage"?


Meanwhile, who's interest is Farouq projecting?
Guy's already getting his hands creamed by some political idiots huh?

Kperoogi, beware lest you're dragged in the mud!
1 2 3 Reply

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