₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,331,008 members, 8,448,214 topics. Date: Monday, 20 July 2026 at 12:47 AM

Toggle theme

My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu - Politics (5) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsMy Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu (36205 Views)

1 2 3 4 5 6 Reply (Go Down)

Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by osazeeblue01: 1:22pm On Aug 05, 2018
Elbinawi:
MY DEAR PRESIDENT, LET YOUR PEOPLE GO

By Dele Momodu

Your Excellency, it is with every sense of love and patriotism that I have decided to write you again despite the frustration of knowing that you may not hearken to my sincere advice to you, as I have written to plead with you on several occasions, but my entreaties have been to no avail. I pray this letter meets you well in the beautiful city of London where I expect you to be resting and relaxing by now whilst waiting to undergo your mandatory physical check-up. Sir, though this piece amounts to unsolicited advice from a self-appointed Special Adviser, I wish to reassure you that you should stop banking on professional politicians who are merely using you to feather their own nests. I demand and require no gratification whatsoever other than to put it permanently and indelibly on record that someone told you the truth while the unrepentant liars took over your space and led you astray.

Before I go on, please, permit me, Sir, to take you down memory lane, from the First Republic to the present. Practically all our leaders failed, or fell, usually not because of only what they did wrong but ostensibly because of what they did not do right. Let me also establish one fact. Most of our leaders have been catapulted to power, not by their superlative might, but by divine intervention. One day, I will chronicle how providence has been responsible for the exalted position all our leaders found themselves. Sadly, practically almost all of them forgot how they reached their lofty heights and sought to personally perpetuate themselves in power, but the celestial manner of their enthronement also saw to their humiliating, sometimes tragic, downfall. Consequently, virtually all, except may be General Abdulsalami Abubakar, were disgraced, removed or retired ignominiously or controversially.
President Obasanjo who was easily the most efficient, efficacious and effervescent leader, after the brilliant and youthful General Yakubu Gowon, ended his tenure in 2007 with the reverberating hoopla surrounding his third term bid. Whether he was interested in it, or his acolytes forced him into it, all his good works would always attract that cloudy addendum. It is noteworthy, for emphasis, that no leader in Nigerian history has ever succeeded in enslaving Nigerians. We can stretch this further, by stating categorically, that no leader in the world has ever achieved absolute authority permanently. Indeed, that is a preserve meant only for God. If only humans reminded themselves constantly of this fact and their mortality!

This is the reason I wish to appeal to you once again to resist the temptation of wanting to take Nigeria back to those days of oppression and suppression. In case you need to be reminded of how much God loves you, I shall gladly oblige. When your military regime was toppled in 1985, your enemies danced on the streets. You were compared to the worst dictators on earth and many would have thought it was finished and over for you. But the ways of the Almighty are not the ways of man. 30 years later, the same Nigerians who rejoiced over the collapse of your military junta, in their collective wisdom or stupidity or amnesia, gave you a resounding victory at the polls against a powerful government and incumbent President. This was after you had tried for a record third time and had virtually given up any chance or hope of winning a Presidential election again. You had actually wept for Nigeria and yourself on that third inauspicious occasion. This time around, in 2015, everything seemed stacked against you, including old age and diminishing health. Yet Nigerians at home and abroad placed their abundant faith in you. What you have done with their faith since then is debatable.
What more could anyone ever ask for again in this life? Credit for that victory must go to everyone, including saints and sinners, in case such nomenclatures exist on planet earth. Please, let no one rewrite the history of that epic battle to dislodge the PDP behemoth. It was thus a gross miscalculation to get power by such default and try to change the narrative by saying you belonged to everyone and to no one, or whichever way it was crafted by your speechwriters. Truth is you belonged to the party that embraced you, warts and all, and all the foot-soldiers who made it possible for you to attain power once again. Not just that, you instantly became the father of the nation on that fateful May 29, 2015, and could no longer discriminate against anyone for that matter. If you wanted to govern in peace and make appreciable impact, you should have treaded softly and walked gingerly towards your ultimate destination. The war of attrition that broke out as soon as you took power was totally unnecessary and uncalled for. Except for your most loyal supporters, not many ever trusted the many fisticuffs were to the benefits of Nigeria, but only for the pecuniary gains of the privileged ones in power.
If you fight a war for over three years and you are unable to defeat your enemies, you should realise that it is either they are stronger than you or your strategy is abysmally faulty and failing. I love the Yoruba adage: “ta a ba leni, ta a ba bani, iwon la a bani sota mo…” (If we pursue an adversary and cannot catch up with him, it is better to retreat, than continue to make enemies of such a person). It is not an act of cowardice to retreat or even surrender. The fight you are pursuing right now would eventually prove too costly for you and for Nigeria, even if you manage to win it, which I seriously doubt. By the time you reach the end of it, you will discover the meaning of anti-climax. The victory will be a pyrrhic one or if otherwise, a cataclysmic defeat. Therefore, I’m shocked that you’re allowing some reckless and vengeful politicians to goad you on and mislead you into victimising those who have left your party and are now opposing you. The same people you met and laughed with recently, before our very eyes, have suddenly become enemies who must be destroyed by all means. Sir, this act is totally unfortunate. Only God can give power and only HE can take it back. You did not use force to take power in 2015, why do you then think you need to retain that power by use of force and fire?

I’m not sure if you are familiar with world history, my dear President. You may need to ask your aides to print out some dark moments in human history for your perusal. What often happens is that you will, inadvertently, turn those you’re harassing now into superstars. What you are playing with is a game of David and Goliath. It is one of the most fascinating scenes in the Christian Bible. Goliath was so confident of his awesome strength and stamina and so looked down on pitiable and diminutive David. The Holy Bible recalls their fight was a classic example of a mismatch. But Goliath suffered a crushing defeat in the hands of David. That battle is still celebrated worldwide till today, and it is a story almost every child knows and is taught to learn from. The didactic lesson from it is that not every battle should be fought and not every arsenal should be deployed. Better to keep some things till they are absolutely needed. This cat and mouse game of using State apparatus to witch-hunt deserters is becoming predictable, boring and nauseating.

Those who have decamped from APC have only exercised their fundamental rights. Whether they are morally right is neither here nor there and is ultimately a verdict for the electorate to ponder and unravel when elections, which loom large, finally arrive. Similarly, whether they are legally justified in their defection is a matter which your party may seek to take up in the courts, and I am certain that the Courts will do justice to the case as they have been doing despite terrorisation, bullying and coercion from some over-exuberant agencies of your government. I pause to observe that some of these guys were hailed by us when they joined our side the last time. At that time, we justified their defection to us as being part of the democratic process. If they have now decided to go because they believe they are not wanted by some influential gladiators in the ruling party, my dear President, please let them go. Your party’s point that they have done so for less than altruistic reasons will be considered and digested by our people who are quite politically savvy and discerning. They will make up their minds as to the rights and wrongs of it all.

Your Excellency, I want you to remember that you will not be in power forever. You have your family and friends to consider. Those who have been locked up in prison today and those being hounded could never have envisaged a day like this would ever come when there would be a reversal of power and fortune. It is too cheap for a Governor to decamp today, and then he and his operatives are being terrorised tomorrow. Power should never be abused in this manner. Who knows what would happen when tomorrow comes again?

One of the reasons former President Jonathan is respected today and enjoys some peace is because he gave you great respect though both of you fought tooth and nail over power. He tolerated many of us who supported you and did not make the occupation of Aso Rock a matter of life and death. Sir, why can’t you reciprocate this wonderful gesture? It is to his eternal credit that, in the midst of our attacks on him, I got invited to the wedding of his daughter, and was treated with decorum. Politics should never be a matter of brutish animosity. That is why I always have tremendous regard for lawyers. They may fight like savage adversaries in Court but, whilst they are there, they still show themselves some honour and respect. It is their attitude once they step outside the courtroom that is even more remarkable. Then they shed the toga of adversaries and become noble and learned friends. I wish all of us could imbibe this kind of camaraderie in the practice of our political beliefs.

Furthermore, I have copious examples that show that what you sow is what you reap. I wish to plead with you to cool temper, Sir. I know how it feels to be abandoned in the lurch by your own friends and supporters. But that is life. Everything can’t be smooth all the time. When you go to the FIFA World Cup, you do so knowing only one team can grab the much-coveted trophy. You should try to play a good and clean game and leave the rest to Allah. You have played your part to the best of your abilities and should be happy once your conscience is clear that there was no better way to do things.

Even if you decide to keep all your opponents in the gulag, it still does not guarantee that you will win the next election in 2019. But if you do it in God’s way by embracing decency and fairness, your rating will go higher. You will attract natural admiration. The love of the people cannot be forced. You’ve been drawing sympathies to the decampees because of the high-handedness and intolerance of some of your agents. As I started this mail, what kept coming back to me was a very popular autobiography I read as a youth, LET MY PEOPLE GO, written by Albert John Luthuli, the very first Black African man to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Luthuli led the African National Congress in South Africa in the apartheid years for 15 agonising years and coordinated mass resistance and non-violent crusade against the White supremacists. Though he did not live long enough to see the end of apartheid, others carried on the task and Nelson Mandela, who spent 27 years in prison, came back alive to become the first President of an independent and free South Africa.
Mr President, there is a moralistic lesson to learn from the life and trajectory of the great Madiba Nelson Mandela. He became a world Statesman for his uncommon magnanimity and spirit of forgiveness. He had the power to exterminate his former tormentors and jailers but instead he decided to set up a Truth and Reconciliation Committee that tried to integrate the whites into a new black-dominated government. Nigeria needs urgent reconciliation, healing and unification, which has led to a strident clamouring for restructuring. We should be tired of fighting for power for personal aggrandisement after groping in darkness for 58 ugly years. There are no prizes for war but there are beautiful garlands for peace.

Sir, I’m begging you in the name of God, please, let your people go, in peace.
I remain yours most sincerely…


https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2018/08/04/my-dear-president-let-your-people-go/amp/
Thank you sir for enlighten him and his supporters.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Ingocof(m): 1:29pm On Aug 05, 2018
Good job though but how much did saraki paid for this well done job?
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Iziquiel(m): 1:35pm On Aug 05, 2018
Oblang:
Who was investigating Amaechi and Fashola b4? The last time Tinubu was taken to court by gej, he won the case so what are u saying?
You even get time dey reply dt man. I saw the nonsense he typed.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by CioAngels(f): 1:38pm On Aug 05, 2018
resurgent2019:
I just pray Buhari listens. Another point worth noting is that politicians are not to die for. You can imagine my shock and sadness at Godswill Akpabio’s alleged plan to APC and Buhari after the suffering of Christians for the past 4 years under this same Buhari? So exactly have we hoi polloi been waging an online war for? And in the process making enemies of our Muslim brothers? So Akpabio by joining APC is invariably saying Buhari is not a terrorist responsible for killing Christians in the middlebelt? I am still perplexed at this point.
He is running away from probe against all he stole. If not toady, tomorrow, he will vomit all he has stolen.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Cajal(m): 1:38pm On Aug 05, 2018
seunmsg:
Dele Momodu should shut up and stop doing laundry business for Saraki at his age. Nigeria is a country of law and order. If Saraki or any of the defectors run foul of the law, they will be dealt with in accordance with the law. If Orji Uzo Kalu, Buhari's number one supporter in the south east can still be facing corruption charges in court without presidential interference, Momodu should not come here and tell us nonsense.
...u are on point sir
They are quite aware that it will be v difficult for Saraki to escape from.... Offa robberygate
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by CioAngels(f): 1:43pm On Aug 05, 2018
I very much doubt if buhari will read this, if his managers should read for him, they will either add or remove.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Iziquiel(m): 1:47pm On Aug 05, 2018
resurgent2019:
He should have stood his grounds! He’s a rich man and can rally his people to resist the north but he failed. They have rendered the work of people useless. Buhari can continue his Islamization drive. We Christians are his for the taking it our leaders can fall so easily. cry
WE CHRISTIANS ARE HIS FOR THE TAKING IT OUR LEADERS CAN FALL SO EASILY. You are huge shame to the Nigerian people, did you even read yourself before posting that nonsense? I pity for you bc you'll continue to be a f**l.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Iziquiel(m): 1:53pm On Aug 05, 2018
jbtobsyn:
Please name those they arrested for you to know they are in jail. Is it they said they are in jail?
Something must definitely be wrong with Oblang for replying a f**l like you.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Oblang(m): 2:01pm On Aug 05, 2018
Iziquiel:
Something must definitely be wrong with Oblang for replying a f**l like you.
Lol.. I just say make I tolerate the ignoramus small ni...
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by jbtobsyn(m): 2:15pm On Aug 05, 2018
Iziquiel:
Something must definitely be wrong with Oblang for replying a f**l like you.
Nothing is wrong with him. He has common sense and he wants to show me unlike you the Mumu calling someone fool.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Mrexcell(m): 2:16pm On Aug 05, 2018
Elbinawi:
MY DEAR PRESIDENT, LET YOUR PEOPLE GO

By Dele Momodu

Your Excellency, it is with every sense of love and patriotism that I have decided to write you again despite the frustration of knowing that you may not hearken to my sincere advice to you, as I have written to plead with you on several occasions, but my entreaties have been to no avail. I pray this letter meets you well in the beautiful city of London where I expect you to be resting and relaxing by now whilst waiting to undergo your mandatory physical check-up. Sir, though this piece amounts to unsolicited advice from a self-appointed Special Adviser, I wish to reassure you that you should stop banking on professional politicians who are merely using you to feather their own nests. I demand and require no gratification whatsoever other than to put it permanently and indelibly on record that someone told you the truth while the unrepentant liars took over your space and led you astray.

Before I go on, please, permit me, Sir, to take you down memory lane, from the First Republic to the present. Practically all our leaders failed, or fell, usually not because of only what they did wrong but ostensibly because of what they did not do right. Let me also establish one fact. Most of our leaders have been catapulted to power, not by their superlative might, but by divine intervention. One day, I will chronicle how providence has been responsible for the exalted position all our leaders found themselves. Sadly, practically almost all of them forgot how they reached their lofty heights and sought to personally perpetuate themselves in power, but the celestial manner of their enthronement also saw to their humiliating, sometimes tragic, downfall. Consequently, virtually all, except may be General Abdulsalami Abubakar, were disgraced, removed or retired ignominiously or controversially.
President Obasanjo who was easily the most efficient, efficacious and effervescent leader, after the brilliant and youthful General Yakubu Gowon, ended his tenure in 2007 with the reverberating hoopla surrounding his third term bid. Whether he was interested in it, or his acolytes forced him into it, all his good works would always attract that cloudy addendum. It is noteworthy, for emphasis, that no leader in Nigerian history has ever succeeded in enslaving Nigerians. We can stretch this further, by stating categorically, that no leader in the world has ever achieved absolute authority permanently. Indeed, that is a preserve meant only for God. If only humans reminded themselves constantly of this fact and their mortality!

This is the reason I wish to appeal to you once again to resist the temptation of wanting to take Nigeria back to those days of oppression and suppression. In case you need to be reminded of how much God loves you, I shall gladly oblige. When your military regime was toppled in 1985, your enemies danced on the streets. You were compared to the worst dictators on earth and many would have thought it was finished and over for you. But the ways of the Almighty are not the ways of man. 30 years later, the same Nigerians who rejoiced over the collapse of your military junta, in their collective wisdom or stupidity or amnesia, gave you a resounding victory at the polls against a powerful government and incumbent President. This was after you had tried for a record third time and had virtually given up any chance or hope of winning a Presidential election again. You had actually wept for Nigeria and yourself on that third inauspicious occasion. This time around, in 2015, everything seemed stacked against you, including old age and diminishing health. Yet Nigerians at home and abroad placed their abundant faith in you. What you have done with their faith since then is debatable.
What more could anyone ever ask for again in this life? Credit for that victory must go to everyone, including saints and sinners, in case such nomenclatures exist on planet earth. Please, let no one rewrite the history of that epic battle to dislodge the PDP behemoth. It was thus a gross miscalculation to get power by such default and try to change the narrative by saying you belonged to everyone and to no one, or whichever way it was crafted by your speechwriters. Truth is you belonged to the party that embraced you, warts and all, and all the foot-soldiers who made it possible for you to attain power once again. Not just that, you instantly became the father of the nation on that fateful May 29, 2015, and could no longer discriminate against anyone for that matter. If you wanted to govern in peace and make appreciable impact, you should have treaded softly and walked gingerly towards your ultimate destination. The war of attrition that broke out as soon as you took power was totally unnecessary and uncalled for. Except for your most loyal supporters, not many ever trusted the many fisticuffs were to the benefits of Nigeria, but only for the pecuniary gains of the privileged ones in power.
If you fight a war for over three years and you are unable to defeat your enemies, you should realise that it is either they are stronger than you or your strategy is abysmally faulty and failing. I love the Yoruba adage: “ta a ba leni, ta a ba bani, iwon la a bani sota mo…” (If we pursue an adversary and cannot catch up with him, it is better to retreat, than continue to make enemies of such a person). It is not an act of cowardice to retreat or even surrender. The fight you are pursuing right now would eventually prove too costly for you and for Nigeria, even if you manage to win it, which I seriously doubt. By the time you reach the end of it, you will discover the meaning of anti-climax. The victory will be a pyrrhic one or if otherwise, a cataclysmic defeat. Therefore, I’m shocked that you’re allowing some reckless and vengeful politicians to goad you on and mislead you into victimising those who have left your party and are now opposing you. The same people you met and laughed with recently, before our very eyes, have suddenly become enemies who must be destroyed by all means. Sir, this act is totally unfortunate. Only God can give power and only HE can take it back. You did not use force to take power in 2015, why do you then think you need to retain that power by use of force and fire?

I’m not sure if you are familiar with world history, my dear President. You may need to ask your aides to print out some dark moments in human history for your perusal. What often happens is that you will, inadvertently, turn those you’re harassing now into superstars. What you are playing with is a game of David and Goliath. It is one of the most fascinating scenes in the Christian Bible. Goliath was so confident of his awesome strength and stamina and so looked down on pitiable and diminutive David. The Holy Bible recalls their fight was a classic example of a mismatch. But Goliath suffered a crushing defeat in the hands of David. That battle is still celebrated worldwide till today, and it is a story almost every child knows and is taught to learn from. The didactic lesson from it is that not every battle should be fought and not every arsenal should be deployed. Better to keep some things till they are absolutely needed. This cat and mouse game of using State apparatus to witch-hunt deserters is becoming predictable, boring and nauseating.

Those who have decamped from APC have only exercised their fundamental rights. Whether they are morally right is neither here nor there and is ultimately a verdict for the electorate to ponder and unravel when elections, which loom large, finally arrive. Similarly, whether they are legally justified in their defection is a matter which your party may seek to take up in the courts, and I am certain that the Courts will do justice to the case as they have been doing despite terrorisation, bullying and coercion from some over-exuberant agencies of your government. I pause to observe that some of these guys were hailed by us when they joined our side the last time. At that time, we justified their defection to us as being part of the democratic process. If they have now decided to go because they believe they are not wanted by some influential gladiators in the ruling party, my dear President, please let them go. Your party’s point that they have done so for less than altruistic reasons will be considered and digested by our people who are quite politically savvy and discerning. They will make up their minds as to the rights and wrongs of it all.

Your Excellency, I want you to remember that you will not be in power forever. You have your family and friends to consider. Those who have been locked up in prison today and those being hounded could never have envisaged a day like this would ever come when there would be a reversal of power and fortune. It is too cheap for a Governor to decamp today, and then he and his operatives are being terrorised tomorrow. Power should never be abused in this manner. Who knows what would happen when tomorrow comes again?

One of the reasons former President Jonathan is respected today and enjoys some peace is because he gave you great respect though both of you fought tooth and nail over power. He tolerated many of us who supported you and did not make the occupation of Aso Rock a matter of life and death. Sir, why can’t you reciprocate this wonderful gesture? It is to his eternal credit that, in the midst of our attacks on him, I got invited to the wedding of his daughter, and was treated with decorum. Politics should never be a matter of brutish animosity. That is why I always have tremendous regard for lawyers. They may fight like savage adversaries in Court but, whilst they are there, they still show themselves some honour and respect. It is their attitude once they step outside the courtroom that is even more remarkable. Then they shed the toga of adversaries and become noble and learned friends. I wish all of us could imbibe this kind of camaraderie in the practice of our political beliefs.

Furthermore, I have copious examples that show that what you sow is what you reap. I wish to plead with you to cool temper, Sir. I know how it feels to be abandoned in the lurch by your own friends and supporters. But that is life. Everything can’t be smooth all the time. When you go to the FIFA World Cup, you do so knowing only one team can grab the much-coveted trophy. You should try to play a good and clean game and leave the rest to Allah. You have played your part to the best of your abilities and should be happy once your conscience is clear that there was no better way to do things.

Even if you decide to keep all your opponents in the gulag, it still does not guarantee that you will win the next election in 2019. But if you do it in God’s way by embracing decency and fairness, your rating will go higher. You will attract natural admiration. The love of the people cannot be forced. You’ve been drawing sympathies to the decampees because of the high-handedness and intolerance of some of your agents. As I started this mail, what kept coming back to me was a very popular autobiography I read as a youth, LET MY PEOPLE GO, written by Albert John Luthuli, the very first Black African man to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Luthuli led the African National Congress in South Africa in the apartheid years for 15 agonising years and coordinated mass resistance and non-violent crusade against the White supremacists. Though he did not live long enough to see the end of apartheid, others carried on the task and Nelson Mandela, who spent 27 years in prison, came back alive to become the first President of an independent and free South Africa.
Mr President, there is a moralistic lesson to learn from the life and trajectory of the great Madiba Nelson Mandela. He became a world Statesman for his uncommon magnanimity and spirit of forgiveness. He had the power to exterminate his former tormentors and jailers but instead he decided to set up a Truth and Reconciliation Committee that tried to integrate the whites into a new black-dominated government. Nigeria needs urgent reconciliation, healing and unification, which has led to a strident clamouring for restructuring. We should be tired of fighting for power for personal aggrandisement after groping in darkness for 58 ugly years. There are no prizes for war but there are beautiful garlands for peace.

Sir, I’m begging you in the name of God, please, let your people go, in peace.
I remain yours most sincerely…


https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2018/08/04/my-dear-president-let-your-people-go/amp/
Waste of precious time jihadists don't understand this kind of language.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by jbtobsyn(m): 2:17pm On Aug 05, 2018
Oblang:
Lol.. I just say make I tolerate the ignoramus small ni...
You fall my hand gan. That is the way of Buhari's supporters sha. Always abusing people who don't support their Mr Fake Integrity.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by arsenal33: 2:29pm On Aug 05, 2018
kings09:
Wen he was writing opinion articles against Gej's govt, u praised him. Suddenly, ur tone has changed since he z against ur master buhari
and now you are praising dele momodu too after condemning him
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by caprini1: 2:30pm On Aug 05, 2018
Queenext:
If DM could backtrack, with all the support he gave to PMB,then it shows PMB is a dismally failure.

I hope he listens,but he who the gods want to kill,they first make him mad.
Honestly,the best thing for PMB right now is to follow the Mandela route of genuine truth,forgiveness and reconciliation,no leader in Nigerian history will surpass him,for that.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by caprini1: 2:35pm On Aug 05, 2018
Doctore9:
Momodu is not an hungry man. U have forgotten about Ovation? Someone cannot talk in peace in this country again. Remember dude sided with PMB before the elections.
As in ,I loose hope in some comments people make on very serious matters,the young man will get lost inside dele momodus house in Ghana,everybody is hungry ,once they say the bitter truth.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by djon78(m): 2:37pm On Aug 05, 2018
This is a big article to the conscience. Anybody that will ridicule this article has no conscience. This is the best advice the President will get.

This article is prophetic, but like the scriptures said Pharaoh hardened his heart so that God will take the final glory.

I rest my case
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by caprini1: 2:40pm On Aug 05, 2018
igwefivestar:
so what did momodu said above that is nonsense to you sir? I me he is saying the truth, the Era of an eye for an eye politics has gone. Nigeria can't move forward without forgiveness, peace and unity
you've said it all...we will never move forward without,forgiveness,peace and unity.

It hurts me so bad that the sambisa forest,gwoza (where mopols are trained) used to be one of the most beautiful natural scenery in borno state.

I wish baba could follow Mandela's example.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Nobody: 2:41pm On Aug 05, 2018
A word is enough for the wise. Sai Baba, pls let ur ppl go.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Nobody: 2:44pm On Aug 05, 2018
I Didnt Kw When Tears Came Down From My Eyes. I Was Really Touched. Nice One DM
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by israelmao(m): 2:54pm On Aug 05, 2018
Dele with long letter and you are sure that Buhari will have time go through this letter?I just pray he will and not just that but comply by taking your kind piece of advice in good faith and maintain restraint from despotism.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by chernest2002: 2:55pm On Aug 05, 2018
It's a matter of choice, let the people go or liberation will come from above and your safety (Buhari)will not be guaranteed just like pharo.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Nobody: 2:57pm On Aug 05, 2018
seunmsg:
Dele Momodu should shut up and stop doing laundry business for Saraki at his age. Nigeria is a country of law and order. If Saraki or any of the defectors run foul of the law, they will be dealt with in accordance with the law. If Orji Uzo Kalu, Buhari's number one supporter in the south east can still be facing corruption charges in court without presidential interference, Momodu should not come here and tell us nonsense.
Nairaland number one hypocrite.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Reference(m): 3:10pm On Aug 05, 2018
When we said Goodluck Jomathan was the best President Nigeria ever had, the reasons are becoming more evident by the day. At the end of it all posterity will speak.

...and we said it even before the last count of the ballot when it was clear it was all over.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by Montaque(m): 3:41pm On Aug 05, 2018
seunmsg:
Dele Momodu should shut up and stop doing laundry business for Saraki at his age. Nigeria is a country of law and order. If Saraki or any of the defectors run foul of the law, they will be dealt with in accordance with the law. If Orji Uzo Kalu, Buhari's number one supporter in the south east can still be facing corruption charges in court without presidential interference, Momodu should not come here and tell us nonsense.
Bros, what is the law on this situation that you so much believe in? Take this from me, the defectors (and in this case, the Senators and HOR members) have not run foul of any law. There was a division in APC as we all know. So they have the window to defect without losing their seats. The executives among them can defect as it pleases them.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by pcicero(m): 4:24pm On Aug 05, 2018
rajiraymond:
Dele should give maximum attention and advice to those pigs that calls his children.
This is very low of you and should not be tolerated here.

You should have left his kids out of this.


Are the mods seeing this?
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by emmasege: 4:55pm On Aug 05, 2018
resurgent2019:
I just pray Buhari listens. Another point worth noting is that politicians are not to die for. You can imagine my shock and sadness at Godswill Akpabio’s alleged plan to APC and Buhari after the suffering of Christians for the past 4 years under this same Buhari? So exactly have we hoi polloi been waging an online war for? And in the process making enemies of our Muslim brothers? So Akpabio by joining APC is invariably saying Buhari is not a terrorist responsible for killing Christians in the middlebelt? I am still perplexed at this point.
Akpabio is like the Biblical Esau. He can sell his own wife or children for power. How on earth did he even manage to become Senate Minority Leader, despite being a first term senator ?

He's very deceitful. To think that this was one of the closest allies of GEJ in his days, makes him look very sneaky.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by omablogs: 4:57pm On Aug 05, 2018
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by orlando(m): 6:28pm On Aug 05, 2018
Frankly speaking this open letter is timely and concisely written. DM deserves some accolades. PMB should not throw away the baby with dirty water. The most important thing he should do now is allow rule of law prevail. He should show more of his achievements than glorifying some elements in the opposition camp. Power comes from God alone. 2019 will come and go too. He still has time to focus on delivering dividends of democracy to Nigerians. #whatifPMBdrops2019ambition, #whatifthemilitarytakesover, God bless Nigeria.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by breakeven: 9:33pm On Aug 05, 2018
resurgent2019:
I just pray Buhari listens. Another point worth noting is that politicians are not to die for. You can imagine my shock and sadness at Godswill Akpabio’s alleged plan to APC and Buhari after the suffering of Christians for the past 4 years under this same Buhari? So exactly have we hoi polloi been waging an online war for? And in the process making enemies of our Muslim brothers? So Akpabio by joining APC is invariably saying Buhari is not a terrorist responsible for killing Christians in the middlebelt? I am still perplexed at this point.
Some southern politicians are criminals. They don't care about their brothers and their faith. To them money is everything.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by PointZerom: 9:39pm On Aug 05, 2018
seunmsg:
Dele Momodu should shut up and stop doing laundry business for Saraki at his age. Nigeria is a country of law and order. If Saraki or any of the defectors run foul of the law, they will be dealt with in accordance with the law. If Orji Uzo Kalu, Buhari's number one supporter in the south east can still be facing corruption charges in court without presidential interference, Momodu should not come here and tell us nonsense.
Shut up.

Let Buhari arrest Maina and Babachir Lawal first.

Why is he keeping mute over Certificate forgery of his finance minister?.
Re: My Dear President, Let Your People Go By Dele Momodu by NdiaraIGBO: 9:55pm On Aug 05, 2018
THIS FAT UGLY BASTARD CALLED DELE MOMODU, HOW MUCH HAVE YOU BEEN PAID BY SARAKI THE FRAUDSTER?

THIS BLACK AFRICAN RACE IS INDEED A CURSED ONE. WE ARE NEVER GOING TO GET IT RIGHT AS A PEOPLE.

BUHARI IS THE BEST PRESIDENT WE HAVE EVER HAD BUT MY PEOPLE DO NOT LIKE DISCIPLINE AND SACRIFICE NEEDED TO DEVELOP A STRONG COUNTRY. 180M USELESS WRETCHED PEOPLE.
1 2 3 4 5 6 Reply

Dear President Tinubu, Is This Punishment Not Too Much For Our Sins? (Opinion)Who Is Afraid Of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo? By Dele MomoduCan Atiku Abubakar Defeat Muhammadu Buhari In 2019? By Dele Momodu234

Boko Haram, ISWAP Threaten To Kill Military Officers Who Captured TerroristsDavid Abioye Lists Qualities Of A Pesidential Candidate That Should Be Voted ForThree Soldiers Killed, 8 Others Injured In Gunfight With Boko Haram (photos)