TruthsFM's Posts
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 (of 136 pages)
lionshare:you can never accept the truths and reality here. Be living in clueless ignorance here
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Addme:hmm 🤔. Corruption is the order of the day in Nigeria 🇳🇬
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PortHarcourtcit:cry for where, 😂 Tinubu government will soon be over and Nigerians will talk about him and his wicked rules and policies against Nigeria people. Nigerians done move on joor . Since the era of Abach government, Nigerians don move on now. Tinubu bad economic policies won’t still stop Nigerians not to think outside the box. Oya you that looking for Tinubu cakes 🎂 at the centre, oya put your mouth to it 🤩🤩🤩
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globalresource:hmm 🤔. If he was introduced to crypto currency then, he will have one of the silent billionaires in Nigeria 🇳🇬. But no our government in power always stop crypto currency investments on every platform in Nigeria. The government just don’t want progress for Nigeria people. Now it’s the same crypto currency the whole world ventured into now.
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Urheadmaster:it’s very unfortunate Nigeria investors are weeping hard over the harsh economy Buhari/Tinubu of APC settled with. Last week, Mike Adenuga of Globacom lost over $300m of investments over Tinubu harsh Economy. APC destroyed Nigeria economy no be small.
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SWaccomodator:that’s just the blunt truths. The so called monopolist Dangote is investing much in USA 🇺🇸 economy. Dangote now bought billions of shares in USA companies now. The so called Dangote refinery isn’t functioning upon all the promises he promised Nigeria.
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Lifestone:when BUA refinery continues operation next year 2024, then you will know that Dangote isn’t the richest man in Africa. Dangote is just leveraging his wealth on the increments of cement and other consuming products in Nigeria that he’s producing. A monopolist isn’t a richest man but a clueless manipulator and debtor
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seunmsg:Seun you know the fact here, but it’s very unfortunate here, you are hiding from the fact. Buhari and Tinubu government destroyed Nigeria economy. It’s in Buhari government that Nigeria was the poorest country in the world. Stop defending this clueless set of oppressors. You are eating in Buhari/Tinubu government, but it doesn’t speaks to you that Nigerian businesses are collapsing by the day over the harsh Economy APC government established in Nigeria. Stop this your lies and propaganda here. Nigerians know the fact and nothing but the fact.
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Former EFCC Chairman Abdulrasheed Bawa, Received Heroic Welcome in his Home Town Jega, Kebbi State. Former EFCC chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, received a hero's welcome in his hometown of Jega, Kebbi State, which has elicited mixed reactions. Bawa had been in the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS) since June, following his suspension by President Bola Tinubu. His suspension came about due to serious allegations of abuse of office. Former Zamfara State governor and Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, had accused Bawa of soliciting a $2 million bribe, an allegation he denied. The suspension was intended to facilitate a proper investigation into his conduct while in office. Online videos depict Bawa's convoy during the visit and the warm reception he received. This situation has sparked diverse opinions among Nigerians. @aai_austin commented: "A hero's welcome for someone accused of multiple offenses? Nigeria is not ready." @AareHmd expressed: "Chaii... Someone who embezzled our national funds. This is absurd. These individuals are making a mockery of us!!!!" @Davidweizide speculated: "The man might contest for president against Tinubu in 2027." @Mansaah_Musa stood by Bawa, saying: "Our Hero. They tried to tarnish your image but they failed." @m___mohaa lamented: "This is disheartening! Someone who is under administrative bail for allegations of looting the country is now celebrated as a hero. We are our own problem." @CyrusAdemola criticized: "Nigeria's political class is the most wasteful group globally." @Erbdoul predicted: "I'm 80% sure that if Abdulrasheed Bawa decides to contest for HMHR or any position in 2027, he might win." @rebelboyalex expressed disbelief: "Imagine giving a hero's welcome to a criminal who didn't prosecute criminals as EFCC chairman and even engaged in theft. They should divide this country into two so that northerners can live in their own world." @hassanmm27 lamented: "It's only in Nigeria that we celebrate criminality. Next up will be a traditional title and then a senate election." @DeGodfactor criticized northern politicians: "The next thing he will come out for Governor in his state; northern politicians are fantastically corrupt, hiding behind their religion to wreak havoc in Nigeria, pocketing taxpayer funds and our mineral resources."
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Hmm 🤔. Na huge inflation in the economy caused it 1 million naira stock my dad bought for us in 2002 is now valued at N11K” – Craze Crown cries out He said that in 2002, their father, concerned about their future, decided to buy shares with the expectation that they would appreciate and convert into a large sum of money. “You have failed as a mother if your son prioritizes you over his wife” -Skit maker Craze Clown Craze Crown, a popular comedian, regrets the discovery that the one million naira stock his father purchased for them 11 years ago is now worth only N12,000. The legendary comedian made the announcement on his Instagram page while lamenting the country’s current state. He said that in 2002, their father, concerned about their future, decided to buy shares with the expectation that they would appreciate and convert into a large sum of money. Unfortunately, this was not the case, as the currency had devalued to 11,561.46. He was furious at how worthless it had become and questioned what he was supposed to do with such a small sum of money. https://www.gistlover.com/1-million-naira-stock-my-dad-bought-for-us-in-2002-is-now-valued-at-n11k-craze-crown-cries-out/
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The N1m shares my dad bought in 2002 is now worth 11,561.46Naira, how? - Craze Clown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtAyjUX7MXw?si=_OmTzdSrgYZErvcY
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May the late Royal Highness soul rest in perfect peace 🪦 |
BREAKING: Ohinoyi Of Ebiraland Dies At 94 Dr. Ado Ibrahim, the Ohinoyi of Ebiraland and Vice Chairman of Kogi State Traditional Council, has passed away at the age of 94. He died in the early hours of Sunday while receiving treatment for an age-related illness at a hospital in Abuja. Before becoming a first-class monarch, he had a successful business career and spent much of his life in Lagos. His burial, following Islamic customs, is scheduled for later on Sunday, with a formal statement expected from the Ohinoyi Palace and the Kogi State administration. https://twitter.com/IntelRegion/status/1718537371359047738
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Isreal defence force deal with the terrorists in Gaza. Hama terrorists will be dealt with fully. Hezbollah is next |
The disappearance of Abdulrasheed Bawa, By Chidi Odinkalu Around February 6, 2005, John Githongo, Permanent Secretary in Kenya’s Presidency responsible for Governance and Ethics, resigned after only two years in the role. As Michaela Wrong narrates in her vicarious memoir of Githongo’s tenure, his resignation letter was transmitted from an anonymous grocer’s shop in London at the beginning of what turned out to be a three-year-long exile. He had fled the job “fearing he could be murdered”. When he took up the position in 2003, Githongo had arrived with energy and ideas from a senior role in global corruption watch-dog, Transparency International. Corruption, he told Ms. Wrong, “could only be fought from the top.” The main lesson from his two years on the job, instead, appeared to be that fighting corruption was also most usually frustrated from the top. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who had her own run-ins with trying to keep the country on the tarmac as Finance Minister, titled her memoirs on public finance reforms: Fighting Corruption is Dangerous. The New York Times described Githongo’s experience as “a cautionary tale about the dangers of challenging a thoroughly corrupted system”. Such tales have become the staple of a succession of bedraggled tenures of chief executives of Nigeria’s leading anti-corruption institution, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. By some coincidence, the EFCC’s first Chairman, Nuhu Ribadu, took his job in the same year that President Mwai Kibaki appointed John Githongo to his position as the presumptive Czar of anti-corruption in the country. The year after his appointment, Ribadu reached an agreement with the Nigeria Police College, Ikeja, to train cadets for the EFCC. Among the graduates from the Course 1 Cadet cohort in 2004 was one Abdulrasheed Bawa. The brief of the EFCC, meanwhile, ran up against constitutional design and cynical politics. Although the Commission is empowered primarily to ensure accountability through criminal prosecutions, ultimate control of that function under Nigeria’s Constitution lies not with the Chairman of the EFCC but with the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, who sits in cabinet where the EFCC Chair does not. What the president gives to the EFCC Chair, he can take away by sleight of hand, a nod, or a wink in the direction of his Attorney-General. Within two years at the beginning of the Millennium, Nigeria had created two anti-corruption institutions where one would easily have served. In 2000, President Olusegun Obasanjo first established the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, better known as the ICPC, to fight routine bureaucratic malefaction. But Nigeria was on the receiving end of sovereign stress from the Financial Action Task Force, FATF, for allegations of high profile international financial crimes involving a joint enterprise of private citizens and public institutions, which made the rehabilitation of the country’s international credit rather frustrating. Somewhat under international duress, therefore, President Obasanjo established the EFCC to help him create the impression that the country was serious about this problem. The motive for the EFCC, it seemed clear from inception, was both instrumental and performative. That was clear enough to the politicians who created it. Most of the leaders of the institution since, however, liked to pretend to the contrary. The EFCC volubly advertises its relative success against the most notorious advance fee fraud syndicates but has proved entirely inept in bringing to account senior politicians who have turned Nigeria into an object of abject pillage and plunder, often with the collusion of a succession of occupants of the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation. Successive Chairs of the Commission have all ended up tarnished and hounded. Nuhu Ribadu was a dashing 40-year-old police officer and lawyer who came to national prominence at the turn of the millennium representing his employers before the Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission headed by Justice Chukwudifu Oputa. He brought that gusto to his role as the pioneer chair of the EFCC where he seemed to command considerable bandwidth with then president, Olusegun Obasanjo to the point of holding sway in decisions over who was eliminated from the line of succession as Obasanjo’s tenure wound to a close. A 2006 US Embassy Cable disclosed by Wikileaks feared that the work of fighting corruption under him was “widely perceived to be nothing more than a political witch hunt by President Obasanjo”. Human Rights Watch famously criticized him as preoccupied with the pursuit of “more headlines than convictions”. As Githongo made his way back to Nairobi from three years in exile in 2008, Ribadu was headed out to his own exile of about the same duration after suffering multiple humiliations and exposure to worse at the hands of Obasanjo’s successors. Tinubu suspends Bawa over weighty allegations of office abuse The tenure of Farida Waziri, the retired Assistant Inspector-General of Police, who succeeded Ribadu at the EFCC, seemed ill-fated from the beginning. According to another cable also disclosed by Wikileaks, Mrs. Waziri was a client of the same politicians whom she was supposed to investigate and her every step seemed to be dogged by suspicion and controversy. A few months into his elected tenure in November 2011, President Goodluck Jonathan mercifully relieved Mrs. Waziri of her position, citing “national interest”. Ibrahim Lamorde, who replaced Mrs. Waziri in 2011, was sacked in November 2015, barraged by allegations by the National Assembly very much redolent of the kind that he should have been investigating against those who were hounding him. His successor, Ibrahim Magu, had the distinction of serving his tenure without Senate confirmation. On July 6, 2020, operatives of the State Security Service, SSS, arrested Mr. Magu and detained him for interrogation in connection with allegations of corruption. Abdulrasheed Bawa was the first Chairman of the EFCC who was not a Police Officer. A lifelong staff of the Commission, Bawa was barely 40 when he was appointed to the role in February 2021 in somewhat controversial circumstances. On June 14, 2023, the presidency announced his suspension from office for opaque reasons given as “weighty allegations of abuse of office”. More than 120 days later, Bawa remains disappeared, reportedly an unacknowledged hostage of the SSS, his location unknown and undisclosed. At least three aspects of Bawa’s fate merit attention. First, a government that claims democratic legitimacy should not be in the business of disappearing citizens, irrespective of what they are accused of. Whatever the allegations against Mr. Bawa are, they cannot justify putting him beneath the Constitution. Second, Nigeria’s Constitution prohibits administrative detention, which is exactly what has become Mr. Bawa’s fate. Nigerians did not suffer that silently from military dictators. An administration led by those who claim to have resisted the abuses of military rule should not be caught now replaying the playbook that they reviled. If there are serious allegations against Mr. Bawa, he deserves to be brought to account administratively in line with the service regulations of his employers or before a court of law. Neither option warrants his indefinite disappearance. Third, established under the National Security Agencies Act, the powers of the SSS are limited to investigation and enforcement of crimes “against the internal security of Nigeria”. Allegations of “abuse of power”, which the presidency claims to be the reason for Bawa’s suspension, would appear to be outside the scope of the SSS. The standard response to this is that Mr. Bawa is receiving a taste of the medicine of institutional caprice that his EFCC meted out to suspects. The shortcomings of the EFCC under successive leaderships since its inception, including its investigation and detainee management protocols, are well documented. However, the habit of terminating successive leaders of the institution into political persecution is independent of that pattern. Ironically restored under the current regime to public service as National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, who bears indelible scars from being hounded into exile as pioneer chair of the EFCC, today supervises the disappearance of Abdulrasheed Bawa in complicit silence. Nigeria’s politicians may be interested only in co-opting the language of fighting corruption but citizens have a duty to care that corruption is not enabled with official impunity. The disappearance of Mohammed Bawa is not merely a violation of the standards of Nigeria’s laws and Constitution; it also ensures that the job of fighting impunity for grand corruption in Nigeria does not stand any chance of success. https://www.vanguardngr.com/2023/10/the-disappearance-of-abdulrasheed-bawa-by-chidi-odinkalu/
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Martinsmine:Till Jesus come, Corruption will never erase from Nigeria. New generation with new set of corruption acts and deeds
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Urheadmaster:haaa I fear them ooo. They are most corrupt people in the world. They prove to people that they are saint but they are the most corrupt dey of people in the world 🌎
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Na another problem Tinubu want to create again. So so unfortunate |
Caleb15:😂
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lexy2014:very true here. Once you jammed them, God’s destiny upon someone’s life is gone already
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garfield1:the court of Appeal will affirmed the judgement of the tribunal court of justice. Bvas machines will do the magic as usual |
Soon Bawa will be nominated for elective positions in Kebbi State. Corruption continues to spread. Hmm 🤔
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Nigerians especially the ravaging Northern region of Nigeria, we sabi worship our oppressors ooo Meanwhile, Over N580Million Recovered From Detained Former EFCC Chairman, Bawa, Nigeria Secret Police, DSS Sources Say Amid Calls For His Prosecution Or Release This comes amid pressure on the DSS to either release Bawa or charge him with offences the secret police’s investigation has found that Bawa committed. Nigeria’s secret police have retrieved over N580 million from the former Chairman of the anti-corruption body, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Abdulrasheed Bawa, sources have told SaharaReporters. Sources in the Department of State Services (DSS) which has detained Bawa since June told SaharaReporters on Friday that the former anti-corruption chief has coughed up over N580 million illegally acquired during his time as the head of the agency. This comes amid pressure on the DSS to either release Bawa or charge him with offences the secret police’s investigation has found that Bawa committed. President Bola Tinubu suspended Bawa indefinitely as the chairman of the EFCC in June “to allow for proper investigation into his conduct while in office” following “weighty allegation of abuse of office leveled against him”. Bawa was taken into custody by the DSS on June 14 hours after his suspension by the president and has since remained there. In August, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) threatened to sue President Tinubu's administration over the continued detention of Bawa by the DSS without arraignment for proper charges. Also, on Wednesday, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir Lawal, knocked President Tinubu’s administration over the continued detention of Bawa and the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin Emefiele, without trial. “It is indefensible to keep the EFCC Chairman and the CBN governor under arrest for extended periods of time without or before trial, just as it is also unacceptable that political parties are used to intimidate and harass citizens exercising their opinions in the public domain,” Lawal said in his statement. “Over N580 million has been retrieved from the incarcerated former chairman of the anti-graft agency, EFCC,” one of the sources told SaharaReporters. SaharaReporters also reported in June that Bawa had been taken from the headquarters of the secret police to a private facility to have total control over him after he refused to write any statements in custody. It was learnt that Bawa told investigators that the DSS had no right to detain him without charges, hence his refusal to write any statements in custody. “They’ve taken Bawa from DSS headquarters to one of their private facilities to have total control over him after he refused to write statements requested from him,” a top security source had said. “The detained EFCC chairman has refused to write statements; he told DSS they have no right to detain him without charges. "He was also accused of shielding former Governor of Zamfara, Abdulaziz Yari, while helping him to hunt down his opponents,” a source had told SaharaReporters. “So far since his detention, he has vehemently refused to cooperate with DSS investigators,” another top source had noted. https://saharareporters.com/2023/10/20/over-n580million-recovered-detained-former-efcc-chairman-bawa-nigeria-secret-police-dss
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Former EFCC chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, received in grand style in his home town Jega, Kebbi state. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvZke81elbM
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Haaaa 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔 |
Wealthoptulent:best advice ever here
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Wow that’s great |
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