Khaleed Yazeedu wrote:

"The Igbo don’t just survive, they create survival.

Without oil blocs, without government backed monopolies, and without political favoritism, the Igbos have built billion dollar economies from markets like Alaba, Onitsha, Aba, Nnewi, Enugu and Ladipo.

These are not figures from fantasy, they are facts!

While others wait for federal allocations, the Igbo man wakes up with a plan, builds a path, and feeds a nation.

But instead of gratitude, they receive suspicion.

Instead of partnership, they face persecution.

Despite pogroms, war, marginalization, and decades of systemic exclusion, they keep rising.

If Nigeria were fair, the Igbo would be celebrated as a backbone, not treated like a burden.

No group that rebuilt itself from genocide should ever again be told to go and kneel for relevance.

The painful truth is this, Nigeria depends on crude oil.

The Igbo depends on no one.

And if ever the day comes when the Igbo decides to walk away, Nigeria must ask itself, what will be left?

It’s not a threat. It’s a warning. A nation cannot afford to keep pushing away those who hold it's economic pulse in their hands".
Khaleed Yazeedu wrote: "The Igbo don’t just survive, they create survival. Without oil blocs, without government backed monopolies, and without political favoritism, the Igbos have built billion dollar economies from markets like Alaba, Onitsha, Aba, Nnewi, Enugu and Ladipo. These are not figures from fantasy, they are facts! While others wait for federal allocations, the Igbo man wakes up with a plan, builds a path, and feeds a nation. But instead of gratitude, they receive suspicion. Instead of partnership, they face persecution. Despite pogroms, war, marginalization, and decades of systemic exclusion, they keep rising. If Nigeria were fair, the Igbo would be celebrated as a backbone, not treated like a burden. No group that rebuilt itself from genocide should ever again be told to go and kneel for relevance. The painful truth is this, Nigeria depends on crude oil. The Igbo depends on no one. And if ever the day comes when the Igbo decides to walk away, Nigeria must ask itself, what will be left? It’s not a threat. It’s a warning. A nation cannot afford to keep pushing away those who hold it's economic pulse in their hands".
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