Sarrki's Posts
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Osagyefo98:Ojukwu was the real traitor He betrayed his commanders and his people He fled and left them at the mercy of the federal troops Thank God for jack (Gowon) Who rescue them |
Osagyefo98:Ojukwu and banjo knows better what their agreement was Banjo had a second thought knowing fully well the plans of Ojukwu to invade south west |
Osagyefo98:Apologize to the one that killed their father? Ojukwu and his descendants should be the one to do that |
Osagyefo98:You can’t set your house on fire because you want to serve someone that wants to evade your home because of “loyalty “ |
Osagyefo98:Ojukwu was one of the mistakes Nigerians will not forget in centuries to come |
Racoon:When your elders are talking Take the sideline and learn |
Ojiofor:We need to set history straight and move on as a nation We need to be patriotic and forgive one another We need to stand for our nation and let the past be We need national cohesion We also need to know that we are one nation one country But also need to set the record straight |
Osagyefo98:Banjo was not known to us Ojukwu released him with ulterior motives to use him for the war He’s a great man that can not allowed his people to be enslaved by Ojukwu the traitor |
omenka:My able leader I greet you with all honor |
Osagyefo98:Ojukwu betrayed all that trust in him |
Osagyefo98:Why did Ojukwu faced the south west? Why is he fighting towards ore He has a ulterior motives he was nip in the bud |
Ojiofor:Pa ojiofor , With due respect sire The are south easterners Nzeogwu and orkar are ibo names sir |
ClitRaider:You wan peme me ? |
Osagyefo98:How old are you? When was history removed from our school curriculum? Please find out You can run but can’t hide |
Osagyefo98:Better than breeding hatred which Ojukwu handed over to you guys |
Osagyefo98:Ojukwu said he wants Biafra What was he looking for in ore towards Lagos? Ojukwu and the 1966 coupist are the real traitors |
Religion is Africa is a sham |
Osagyefo98:Ojukwu from the history we know and as it stands today was arrogant,self centered and a bigot that was so obsessed with power |
Osagyefo98:The awolowo you called gave the south west free education, free healthcare among goodies we received from him we thanked him He did not allow his people to be massacred because of pride , ego and chest beating Till tomorrow Ojukwu descendants are full of hatred and bitterness |
Osagyefo98:You are a comedian So are there when everything happens Someone is giving first hand information you said it’s wrong The truth is you guys should go and do soul searching I:E IMF reports that we are in recession you guys believes Same imf said we are out of recession you said imf doesn’t know what they are doing You Only believe what you have been wired to believe |
Osagyefo98:You can’t change the hand of the clock Ojukwu is a traitor So are his descendants Nigeria would have been better if there was no 1966 Coup or if the Coup was not bloody. Why did we kill ourselves? Power can change hands without blood. Buhari became Head of State without shedding blood. I'm not IBB fan but his Coup was bloodless and I commend him for not killing GMB and Idiagbon. I must confess, we were celebrating my sister's birthday in April 1990 when we heard of Orka's Coup, the jubilation became double, and people were trooping in with emergency gifts for her..... But shortly after we heard about the killing of IBB ADC and others and the guy started dividing the country on radio, people were sad. Why killing others to get power? 90% of bloody coups in Nigeria failed!!! We can play politics of power without shedding blood, those who introduced blood to our politics will account for their wickedness on the day of judgment! |
helinues:Nop just to show the real traitors |
It’s so unfortunate that the same people that calls one a betrayer are the real betrayers The 1966 coup and 1990 coup are the only the bloodiest coup in history of Nigeria Led by kaduna nzeogwu 1966 and orkar 1990 |
Ojukwu, the man who ordered my father’s execution was his friend –Prof Omigbodun, daughter of Col. Banjo Olayinka Omigbodun is the immediate-past Head of Psychiatry, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan and an honorary consultant in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry to the University College Hospital, Ibadan. The pioneering director at the university’s Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, which started with funding from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, tells ALEXANDER OKERE about motivation, career and family For how long have you been a professor and how would you describe your experience as an academic? I became a professor on October 1, 2008; that was 11 years ago. I actually qualified as a psychiatrist in 1991 but the university would not give me a job. Fortunately, my husband got a fellowship position in the United States in 1993, so I travelled to the US with the family. I did not take up an academic position with the university until I returned in 1997. It has been very eventful since I started working at the University of Ibadan. I started my career in child and adolescent psychiatry in 1986 as a resident under the tutelage of (the late) Prof Michael Oludare Olatawura and did part of my residency in Nigeria and the United Kingdom. Were you educated in Nigeria? I started nursery school in Lagos at the Adrao International School, Victoria Island, Lagos. I was living with my parents at that time in Lagos. My father was in the army at the time and my mother was a housewife. My mother was a Sierra Leonean and my father was a Nigerian. We left for Sierra Leone a day before the civil war broke out. In Sierra Leone, I attended the Holy Rosary Primary School, Kenema, about 300 miles from Freetown. I was there for two years before we moved to Freetown, where I attended St. Anne’s Primary School for one year. When the war ended in 1970, we returned with my mum to Nigeria and I attended the Staff School, University of Ibadan. I spent three years at the school before I moved to St. Louis Grammar School, Mokola, Ibadan. Then I had my advanced levels for two years at the International School, University of Ibadan, and gained admission to UI through direct entry to study Medicine and Surgery in 1980. In 1990, one of my senior professors, Olabisi Odejide, asked me whether I would like to have some exposure abroad; that was when I moved to England. I lived in Lancaster and worked at the Lancaster Moor Hospital. I was also at the Queen’s Park Hospital, in Blackburn. I obtained a diploma in Psychiatry from the Victorian University of Manchester in 1992. While I was in the UK, I flew into Nigeria for my final fellowship examinations in the West African College of Physicians in the Faculty of Psychiatry and the National Postgraduate College of Medicine in Psychiatry in 1991. By 1993, I was in the US at the Department of Family Studies, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, training and working as a family and relationship therapist. I also did some research in the Bipolar Disorders Unit. I must say that having training exposure on three continents really enriched me. Was it a personal decision to study Psychiatry? Yes. When I got to medical school, I thought I would do paediatrics. However, on the first day of my rotation at the paediatrics ward, I decided that I could not do it anymore because seeing sick children was too traumatic for me and I didn’t think I would be able to handle them. So, I took my mind of that specialty until I got to the Psychiatry rotation; it was wonderful. I was fascinated by patients who had mental health conditions; some of them heard the voices of people they could not see while some were very depressed. I remember meeting a man who was partially paralysed because he had fallen from a three-storey building when he was depressed and had attempted suicide. I met interesting patients with different stories. I also found that in psychiatry, we don’t just deal with a part of the body but with the whole patient, with their family and community and work; in psychiatry, we learned to carry out holistic assessments of patients and their families and I found this very interesting. It was in-depth work. https://punchng.com/ojukwu-the-man-who-ordered-my-fathers-execution-was-his-friend-prof-omigbodun-daughter-of-col-banjo/
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2' NEWS Allow Nnamdi Kanu come home to bury his mother, Imo monarchs tell FG Published Sunday Nwakanma – Umuahia Monarchs in Orlu, Imo State, on Thursday, appealed to the Federal Government to allow the leader of proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu to return to Nigeria for the burial his mother, Sally, without molestation. This appeal came at Amakwo Event Centre in Orsu Local Government Area of Imo State. The royal fathers led by HRM Eze Gideon Ejike said, “Kanu is not a terrorist. Terrorists kill but we are yet to see any bloodshed by Kanu. He is our hero and should be allowed to bury his mother before the beginning of next year. He deserves the honour and right as the first son to bury his mother.” READ ALSO: Google celebrates Fela’s mother 119th birthday with doodle The monarchs also called on the United Nations to prevail on the FG to allow Kanu to bury his dead mother without molestation. The traditional ruler of Orsu ancient kingdom in Ideato North LGA said Kanu had brought hope to the oppressed people of South East and South-South Nigeria, hence their decision to bestow on him a chieftaincy title https://punchng.com/allow-nnamdi-kanu-come-home-to-bury-his-mother-imo-monarchs-tell-fg/
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Adekamkpe23:I may not like is policy though This is harsh |
God bless Muhammadu Buhari God bless federal republic of Nigeria
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SLAP44:Pdp Emergency analyst |
simpleseyi:They are on autopilot to wail |
life103:Enemies of the state are bitter we all know |
Awol1:You spoke well |
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