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PoliticsRe: Wike: Tinubu Never Promised To Solve All Problems Of Nigeria by Racoon(m): 9:48am On Oct 18, 2025
How many then has he solved? Absolutely none. Meanwhile, he had compounded the ones he met on ground. So what do you have to say about that my loquacious 40 years whiskey drunk?
PoliticsRe: Defence Intelligence Detains Brig Gen Over Alleged Coup Plot To Overthrow Tinubu by Racoon(m): 9:46am On Oct 18, 2025
It may be true and it may also be a phantom attempt to misconstrue facts.
PoliticsRe: Margaret Obi Appointed As A High Court Judge In UK by Racoon(m): 9:16am On Oct 18, 2025
Another Igbo woman blazing the trail. Congratulations
PoliticsRe: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 7:50am On Oct 18, 2025
Being senselessly nervy, jerky and impulsive under the influence of white powder is not political sagacity.
PoliticsRe: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op):
Just imagine! Like the controversy surrounding the release of hardened unrepentant criminals that the government initially celebrated as achievement, now another unimaginable controversy is setting in. For goodness sake, these are the necessary things that ought to have been thoroughly reviewed if needed be before the official announcement.

However, as expected of policy somersaults in the the Tinubu's rudderless government, Nigerians & the international community is about to witness another bout of their cluelessness ineptitude and incompetency
PoliticsMaryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 7:43am On Oct 18, 2025
In today's Saturday Tribune column, I take advantage of the Tinubu government's admission that it has not yet finalized its much-criticized state pardon to advise it, especially regarding the unmerited clemency granted to Maryam Sanda who murdered her husband in cold blood:

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, like his predecessors, has the constitutional right to grant clemency. He draws this right from Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution, which grants him the power to pardon convicts and commute sentences. But constitutional rights are not moral shields, and mercy must ennoble justice, not mock it.

Prerogative of mercy, designed to temper justice with compassion, has, in the estimation of several people, been cheapened by the recent pardons Tinubu approved for murderers, drug traffickers and other hardened criminals.

The list of 175 beneficiaries of Tinubu’s pardon includes people convicted of violent crimes and narcotics offenses. Among them is Maryam Sanda, sentenced to death in 2020 for killing her husband, Bilyaminu Bello, in a fit of murderous fury.

The case captured the imagination of the nation because it symbolized both the collapse of domestic civility and the delicate hope that justice could still work in Nigeria. Now, Tinubu’s pardon threatens to turn that hope to scorn and righteous indignation.

Following fierce, furious, sustained public backlash, the federal government hurriedly clarified on Thursday that no inmate has yet been released under the current Presidential Prerogative of Mercy exercise. Attorney-General Lateef Fagbemi said the process “remains at the final administrative stage” and that it is still undergoing verification and review.

That acknowledgement of bureaucratic pause is what has prompted this reflection. If the government is really and truly reviewing the pardons, it still has time to salvage its moral standing. Once the releases occur, it will be too late to reverse the damage.

The most exasperating aspect of the exercise is how it was packaged. When news broke that Maryam Sanda was among those granted clemency, the outrage was instantaneous. To soften the blow, a press conference was convened, and Bilyaminu Bello’s biological father by the name of Ahmed Bello Isa, who had been entirely absent from his son’s life, was suddenly thrust before cameras to claim credit for Sanda’s release.

Reading from what appeared to be a prepared statement, he said he had sought the pardon because he wanted his grandchildren to have the benefit of growing up with their mother. The wealthy and well-connected father of Maryam Sanda, who appeared to have engineered the news conference, sat beside the deadbeat father and enjoyed the theater.

Meanwhile the family that had adopted, nurtured, educated and buried Bilyaminu Bello watched in shock and disempowering rage. They said the pardon reopened old wounds and compounded their grief with humiliation.

Forgiveness is virtuous only when it is voluntarily given. It can never be coerced or legislated. We all know that the spectacle of the biological father’s news conference was designed to sanitize the gross injustice of Maryam Sanda’s unmerited pardon and to launder the privilege of her parents through a choreographed display of mawkish sentimentality.

But it succeeded only in deepening public disgust. No one disputes that mercy has a place in governance. A humane system recognizes remorse and rehabilitation. But presidential pardon must be the culmination of justice, not its subversion. When the powerful can engineer clemency for their own, while the poor rot in overcrowded prisons for petty theft, mercy becomes a weapon of inequality.

If the rationale for the pardons is “good conduct,” how was that measured for an insensate, blood-soaked murderer like Maryam Sanda who was sentenced only five years ago? Where is the proof of her repentance, the evidence of her rehabilitation, the testimony of those hurt by her actions?

Were the adoptive parents of Bilyaminu Bello even consulted? It’s obvious they were not. The public statement signed by Dr. Bello Haliru Mohammed on behalf of the family calling the pardon “the worst possible injustice any family could be made to go through” is all the proof you need.

To have Maryam Sanda walk the face of the earth again, free from any blemish for her heinous crime as if she had merely squashed an ant, is the worst possible injustice any family could be made to go through for a loved one,” the statement said.

The presidency’s statement that many pardoned inmates had learned trades or earned degrees in custody is neither here nor there. Drug barons can run classroom workshops, and murderers can earn degrees, but that does not erase their crimes. It doesn’t give justice to the victims of their transgressions.

The integrity of justice does not lie in whether convicts can read the Bible, recite the Qur’an or weld steel. It lies in whether the law retains meaning after the verdict.

This is not, of course, the first time Nigerian presidents have abused the power of mercy. Past leaders have freed convicted looters, coup plotters, and cronies under the guise of national reconciliation.

What is new, at least based on my recollection of past presidential pardons, is the raw, remorseless, I-dare-you brazenness of Tinubu’s. The inclusion of notorious drug traffickers and violent offenders, even as ordinary Nigerians struggle daily with the terror of crime and narcotics abuse, communicates the message that crime pays if you have the right connection in high places.

That reality has the capacity to sap the last ounce of moral energy from law enforcement officers who risk their lives to arrest traffickers and murderers. It also tells victims that their pain can be erased by elite connections.

It is particularly obscene that this mass pardon occurred just months after Tinubu’s government rolled out a “war on drugs” campaign and urged young Nigerians to resist the lure of narcotics. How can a government that preaches zero tolerance for drug trafficking now pardon convicted traffickers in the same breath?

Yes, as I pointed out earlier, the President’s prerogative of mercy is legal. But legality is not morality. The framers of the Constitution imagined that the power to pardon would correct miscarriages of justice. It was not intended to become a recycling plant for impunity.

Clemency must not reward crime. A pardon should emerge from a rigorous, transparent process involving victims’ families, prosecutors, correctional officials and mental-health professionals, not from political patronage or backroom lobbying. And it should be rare, not routine.

If Tinubu insists on exercising this right, let him do so for prisoners of conscience, wrongly convicted individuals, and those who have served decades for non-violent offenses. It insults justice if it’s mostly for the wealthy and the well-connected who can summon ministers to plead their cause.

By including Maryam Sanda and other violent offenders, the Tinubu administration has set a perilous precedent. It invites every future convict with political or financial clout to expect similar treatment. It signals to judges that their sentences can be casually undone, and to prosecutors that their diligence is futile.

Most dangerously, it erodes public faith in the rule of law. Once people believe justice is negotiable, they seek it elsewhere, often in violence or vigilantism. Nigeria’s fragile social fabric cannot afford that descent.

The Attorney-General’s statement that the list is still “under review” offers the president a chance to rethink. He can still remove names that discredit the exercise and reinforce public confidence by publishing transparent criteria for eligibility.

He can also seize this moment to reform the clemency process itself. The Presidential Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy must include civil-society representatives, victim-advocacy groups and credible clergy.

If this government truly values mercy, let it show compassion to the countless awaiting-trial inmates languishing without verdicts, some jailed longer than the sentences for their alleged crimes. Mercy belongs not in freeing the privileged guilty but in rescuing the forgotten innocent.

Every pardon sends a message. The absolution of Maryam Sanda tells Nigerians that if you are the scion of a powerful and wealthy family you can murder and get away with it.

True mercy cannot be scripted, televised or bartered for lineage. Tinubu’s mass clemency, if implemented as announced, will deepen Nigeria’s moral anemia.

The president should pause the process, strike out the names that insult justice, and remember that mercy divorced from morality is corruption. For once, let power bow before principle.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2025/10/maryam-sanda-and-tinubus-crisis-of.html

PoliticsRe: Throwback Posts Of Reno Omokri Talking About Christian Genocide In Nigeria by Racoon(m): 7:36am On Oct 18, 2025
Sanctimonious hypocrites are the swines who now eat political crumbs that fell out from their masters table while renouncing their conscience
PoliticsRe: ‘emi Lókàn’ Statement, A Prayer, Not Entitlement — Adelabu Clarifies (VIDEO) by Racoon(m): 5:31am On Oct 18, 2025
The emilokanism of a heroin running man was well understood to be "grab it, snatch it and run away with it @all cost. Now see where it landed a nation. Ibadan people be warned.
PoliticsRe: IPOB Among 20 World’s Deadliest Terror Groups – Report by Racoon(m):
Putindbutt:
See the dates, this started in 2020 during Endsars protest when Kanu instructed ipob to attack prisons and release the criminals.
Guess Nnamdi Kanu is also responsible for all the numerous prison breaks in Niger, Katonkerife, and the dread Kuje prisons in Abuja? What about BH terrorists invasion of the NDA and Nigerian Army University Biu?

PoliticsRe: IPOB Among 20 World’s Deadliest Terror Groups – Report by Racoon(m): 9:42pm On Oct 17, 2025
Sudden the allegations of Christain genocide is rattling them so much that they have to latch unto this stale propaganda. The real terrorists are well known the world.

The miyetti Allah was the 4th global terrorists group. The UAE forwarded the names of many BH terrorists sponsors including a serving minister back then to the Nigerian govt, but what become of it?Waiting for the day the UN will proscribe IPOB as a terrorist organization
PoliticsRe: ASUU Confirms Kingibe's Allegation, Admits Wike Revoked UNIABUJA's Land by Racoon(m): 9:37pm On Oct 17, 2025
And the notorious land grabber is still in office because his fellow brothers are in govt
PoliticsRe: NOA Issues Guidelines on National Anthem Recitation At Official Events by Racoon(m):
Just imagine! Like the controversy surrounding the release of hardened unrepentant criminals that the government initially celebrated as achievement, now another unimaginable controversy is setting about a nation's anthem rendition.

For goodness sake, these are the necessary things that ought to have been thoroughly reviewed if needed be before the official process of changing a country national anthem be announced.

However, as expected of policy somersaults in the the Tinubu's rudderless government, Nigerians & the international community is about to witness another bout of their cluelessness ineptitude and incompetency
PoliticsRe: Reno Omokri-sponsored Probe Finds Evidence Of Christian Genocide In Nigeria by Racoon(m): 9:16pm On Oct 17, 2025
Chei! Reno Omokri this one is your Achilles's heel. Your Christian genocide denouncement propaganda has backfired. So is your Waterloo starts. You better fact check @Mike Arnold well well. He is not Peter Obi that is talking it cool with you.

PoliticsRe: Boko Haram Are Killing More Muslims Than Christians - US Envoy by Racoon(m): 9:13pm On Oct 17, 2025
Ehen! Continue the narrative. Even BH terrorists tells you the Christains are the karfirs first before the norminal muslims to be dealt with.
PoliticsRe: Court Refuses Police Bid To Stop ‘free Nnamdi Kanunow’ Protest by Racoon(m): 9:11pm On Oct 17, 2025
"When lawlessness and tyranny comes into the land, it will be in the guise of fighting crime." - Thomas Jefferson
PoliticsRe: 9 Killed, Many Kidnapped As Bandits Mount Coordinated Attacks On Kaduna Communit by Racoon(m): 6:20pm On Oct 17, 2025
ipobarethieves:
When Peteru become President, there will be no more insecurity, bandits. Terrorism go stop at his command. ...
It is really sad these are the kinds of despicable humanity one is sharing a country with. There is nothing a wicked heart can't conceive.

Please respect the dignity and humanity of families, communities and localities who have lost people to this senseless carnage.
PoliticsRe: 9 Killed, Many Kidnapped As Bandits Mount Coordinated Attacks On Kaduna Communit by Racoon(m): 6:16pm On Oct 17, 2025
The terrorists they have been recycling are still doing maximum damage while the government continues to seat as lame ducks. Painfully lives are being wasted while the obsession of the ruling party and government is the politics of 2027.
PoliticsRe: Is This Truly Who Reno Omokri Is?- By His Bosom Friend(photo) by Racoon(m): 5:55pm On Oct 17, 2025
Strangely Reno Omokri has not even deemed it for to fact check, reply that damaging press conference or even mention Peter Obi as he often does in the last 48 hours.

The whole thing simply left him dazed. It was a brutal knock out. I believe God is warning Reno to desist. The next one may be something else.
BusinessRe: 650 Ships Have Loaded Products From Dangote Refinery In 1 Year - Reno by Racoon(m): 5:23pm On Oct 17, 2025
grin Hehehe! Never you believe this serial liar, scammer, and propagandist. Imagine Reno Omokri leaving grevious allegations Mike Arnold made against him unattended to and he consoling himself with Dangote Refinery
PoliticsRe: Throwback: 1965 Group Photo Of Nigerian Leaders Before The First Military Coup by Racoon(m): 5:15pm On Oct 17, 2025
What a history. Nigeria was just tottering from crisis to crisis then. With Operation Adam-III wiping and subjugating the Tivs in the middle belt area and Operation Wetie raging uncontrollably in the SW, the 5-major felt the best thing to do is to struck. The rest is history.

Same problem or thing the late Major Gideon Gwarza Orkar and his co-conspirators envisage and try to avoid. Now a worst form of both situations are threatening to consume this nation.
PoliticsRe: Nigeria Missing As IMF Lists Africa’s Fastest-growing Economies by Racoon(m): 5:08pm On Oct 17, 2025
AMINDA:
Bayo Onanuga and his fellow charlatans must be seething right now....Why do they keep chasing validation from the IMF and the Worldbank?...
Only failures or catastrophes seek validation for their misadventures because that will be the only consolation.
PoliticsRe: Herdsmen Attack Chief Oniyide Olubayo, Baale Of Balogun Village In Ogun by Racoon(m):
Ironfaceman:
I don't believe it herdsmen will attack an oba in ogun state. But that's the reality on ground. #Regionalize Nigeria or die.
My brother the matter get as e be. I kept on saying the same thing o

PoliticsRe: Herdsmen Attack Chief Oniyide Olubayo, Baale Of Balogun Village In Ogun by Racoon(m): 4:13pm On Oct 17, 2025
Hehehe. Femi Fani-Kayode ettu gi? Wetin dey happen?
AgricultureRe: Emotional Moment Elderly Woman Confronts Fulani Herdsmen Destroying Her Farmland by Racoon(m):
Softmirror:
Says one of those who is against the establishment of APC'S livestock ministry which aims at finding lasting solution to this challenges.
You lots are irredeemably shameless.
AgricultureRe: Emotional Moment Elderly Woman Confronts Fulani Herdsmen Destroying Her Farmland by Racoon(m): 2:53pm On Oct 17, 2025
Here we are again with these marauders still wrecking unimaginable havoc and destruction unabatedly. Now when the woman retaliate, then soldiers will swarm her like bees and SC will condemn her to death like Sunday Jackson?
CrimeRe: Eras Of Public Executions As Punishment For Capital Offenses; Right Or Wrong? by Racoon(op):
Racoon:
Can a so called born again Christian soldier carry out this gruesome thing? What is your opinion in view of the reality of the situation in Nigeria today?
As regards this issue, I can categorically said a big YES! Once you enlist into the military, you pledged allegiance to your nation especially the constitution to obey lawful orders including the executions of hardened unrepentant criminals.

I once asked my dad & other Christians who were part of the ECOMOG & UN expeditions in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Lebanon etc if they killed. The answer was Yes! They finished off rebels who are recalcitrant.
CrimeRe: Eras Of Public Executions As Punishment For Capital Offenses; Right Or Wrong? by Racoon(op): 2:43pm On Oct 17, 2025
Now someone have asked a question; Can a so called born again Christian soldier carry out this gruesome thing? What is your opinion in view of the reality of the situation in Nigeria today?
For true Christians, job and career matters a lot. They choose jobs and careers that won't give them guilty conscience.

No true Christian will put himself in a job that involves killing of fellow humans. Obeying superior orders to commit manslaughter or other evils won't be an excuse in the sight of God because you deliberately made yourself available to be commanded when you chose the job.

If a person didn't bring himself out for soldiering will he be under any order from a superior officer let alone obeying an order to fire someone dead?
CrimeRe: Eras Of Public Executions As Punishment For Capital Offenses; Right Or Wrong? by Racoon(op):
These were definitely eras when military govts( Gowon, Obasanjo, Abacha etc) didn’t think twice before signing the death warrants of hardened and ruthless criminals.

Unlike this days, now BAT could pardon robbers, drug barons, killers etc. This is the time we really need things like this..but rather it is ceasefire you hear, amnesty or rehabilitation...

Why putting more bondages on security agencies to arrest and prosecution of criminals when government can't carry out orders of court reasons crime unabated. Now the question is in the face of barefaced looting of the nation, would the NASS adopt this modality again in a 21st century? It is very doubtful.

The NASS will never legislate or sign the warrant on capital punishment because they will quickly be consumed by same because of their quest in contributing to the institutional corruption plaguing this nation. This is because there is no difference between the overt armed robber and the legislative robber.
CrimeRe: Eras Of Public Executions As Punishment For Capital Offenses; Right Or Wrong? by Racoon(op): 2:40pm On Oct 17, 2025
I still have PTSD from the ones I witnessed in Bar Beach back in those days. However, the wave of executions seems not to have done much.
CrimeEras Of Public Executions As Punishment For Capital Offenses; Right Or Wrong? by Racoon(op): 2:39pm On Oct 17, 2025
Those days when Military Administrators didn’t think twice before signing such warrants:

I think only one or two Governors have signed such warrants in this our democracy since 1999: Sure you know them.


22 July 1995: Forty-three prisoners found guilty of armed robbery are publicly executed by firing squad at Kirikiri Prison in Lagos State (NTA Television Network 22 July 1995; AI Sept. 1995, 5)

Source:Refworld org.


This is the only photo I can post here. Other images too one kind to be posted here( Greg Nwoko on Facebook).
https://www.facebook.com/share/15gGDh7LPq/

-1). Picture of Report;
-2). Public Executions of the Abortive February 13th 1976 Coup Plotters.
-3). Public Executions of the Legendary Criminal Lawrence Anini, Monday Osunburs and others in Bar Beach Lagos.

SportsRe: Burkina Faso Leader To CAF: How Did We Miss The Playoff? by Racoon(m): 2:09pm On Oct 17, 2025
Softmirror:
Nawa for you o! I really feel your pain. Take it easy on your soul.
I complained to you Oga? Face your life too bro
SportsRe: Burkina Faso Leader To CAF: How Did We Miss The Playoff? by Racoon(m): 2:05pm On Oct 17, 2025
Toh! A responsible leader is asking questions to demand probity and accountability because the corruption glitches have left INEC, JAMB, WAEC to now involved CAF.

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