• Nigerian politicians should stop fooling themselves. Is it now that Muhammad Buhari died that? We the masses is very much aware that Muhammad Buhari died long time ago.
    Nigerian politicians should stop fooling themselves. Is it now that Muhammad Buhari died that? We the masses is very much aware that Muhammad Buhari died long time ago.
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    2
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  • What advice would you give to someone who is moving to Abuja, Nigeria?
    Abuja is the city of packaging!

    Before I moved to Abuja, i lived in Edo State, Benin City precisely. I do not know if you know Benin but it's a very quiet and “normal” city. I used to hear and read about “the Abuja lifestyle” and I always wondered why people did so much. Till i got a job and moved to Abuja.

    I will tell you a story and i will drop my points (or advice) within my story.

    I am an Architect by profession and for someone who had practiced mostly in Edo State and a few times in Lagos, bringing my practice to a mega city wasn't as easy as I envisioned.

    ••If you want to meet people, Abuja is the place but then to take the part, you have to look the part.

    I finally secured a meeting with a potential client I met online. We fixed a date to meet at a choice restaurant in Wuse II.

    ••Transportation is pretty cheap in Abuja.

    I live in Dutse. I took a taxi to Wuse market. It's #150 from Dutse, then i joined another to my destination, #100. When i got there, i came down from the taxi, looking sharp but a bit tired and my client was just driving in as well. I walked up to him, greeted him and introduced myself and he asked “Did your car break down?” I innocently replied and said “No sir, I do not have a car yet”.

    I noticed his disposition changed a bit. He didn't say anything more, we went in, had the meeting and we dispersed. He even offered to drop me. But he doesn't call me back. 2 weeks later, i call him and I ask about his job. He says “well, I'm not quite sure about you. I do not know an Architect who doesn't have a car. How would you go to site? Would you be jumping taxis all the time? I got another person who is Mobile. Maybe next time”.

    I was shocked. Mostly because where i was coming from, nobody had ever told me that i needed a car to design a brilliant structure for anyone. But i had learnt a lesson.

    ••If you have to live in Abuja, you MUST have a car, and a clean one at that. Its a necessity. Somehow, it affects how people look at you and weigh you.

    I secured another meeting with another client and this time i was wise enough to use an UBER. I didn't lose this job entirely, i secured only the design aspect but i lost the construction(also because I wasn't mobile).

    ••In Abuja, accommodation is cheap in extreme areas but a little more expensive in town.

    The problem with staying in these areas is that you don't get to meet a lot of people who would eventually add anything meaningful to your life, and then if you eventually meet someone in town, and you have meetings with the person, going back home can be very stressful.

    ••There is alot of fake life in Abuja, if you are not careful, you will fall a victim.

    ••There is night life in Abuja, its not a crazy as Lagos but then if you are someone who is an extrovert, you would discover some really nice places.

    ••Abuja will teach you naturally how to be classy.

    ••If you are someone who has low self esteem, you will be carried away. If you are someone who has “big eyes” you will indulge in corrupt practices- you will do anything to belong.

    When moving to Abuja, Come with the mindset of building connections, meet people that will change and grow your business and then take you to the next level of greatness.

    Beyond this, every other thing is a walkover!
    What advice would you give to someone who is moving to Abuja, Nigeria? Abuja is the city of packaging! Before I moved to Abuja, i lived in Edo State, Benin City precisely. I do not know if you know Benin but it's a very quiet and “normal” city. I used to hear and read about “the Abuja lifestyle” and I always wondered why people did so much. Till i got a job and moved to Abuja. I will tell you a story and i will drop my points (or advice) within my story. I am an Architect by profession and for someone who had practiced mostly in Edo State and a few times in Lagos, bringing my practice to a mega city wasn't as easy as I envisioned. ••If you want to meet people, Abuja is the place but then to take the part, you have to look the part. I finally secured a meeting with a potential client I met online. We fixed a date to meet at a choice restaurant in Wuse II. ••Transportation is pretty cheap in Abuja. I live in Dutse. I took a taxi to Wuse market. It's #150 from Dutse, then i joined another to my destination, #100. When i got there, i came down from the taxi, looking sharp but a bit tired and my client was just driving in as well. I walked up to him, greeted him and introduced myself and he asked “Did your car break down?” I innocently replied and said “No sir, I do not have a car yet”. I noticed his disposition changed a bit. He didn't say anything more, we went in, had the meeting and we dispersed. He even offered to drop me. But he doesn't call me back. 2 weeks later, i call him and I ask about his job. He says “well, I'm not quite sure about you. I do not know an Architect who doesn't have a car. How would you go to site? Would you be jumping taxis all the time? I got another person who is Mobile. Maybe next time”. I was shocked. Mostly because where i was coming from, nobody had ever told me that i needed a car to design a brilliant structure for anyone. But i had learnt a lesson. ••If you have to live in Abuja, you MUST have a car, and a clean one at that. Its a necessity. Somehow, it affects how people look at you and weigh you. I secured another meeting with another client and this time i was wise enough to use an UBER. I didn't lose this job entirely, i secured only the design aspect but i lost the construction(also because I wasn't mobile). ••In Abuja, accommodation is cheap in extreme areas but a little more expensive in town. The problem with staying in these areas is that you don't get to meet a lot of people who would eventually add anything meaningful to your life, and then if you eventually meet someone in town, and you have meetings with the person, going back home can be very stressful. ••There is alot of fake life in Abuja, if you are not careful, you will fall a victim. ••There is night life in Abuja, its not a crazy as Lagos but then if you are someone who is an extrovert, you would discover some really nice places. ••Abuja will teach you naturally how to be classy. ••If you are someone who has low self esteem, you will be carried away. If you are someone who has “big eyes” you will indulge in corrupt practices- you will do anything to belong. When moving to Abuja, Come with the mindset of building connections, meet people that will change and grow your business and then take you to the next level of greatness. Beyond this, every other thing is a walkover!
    Like
    Wow
    2
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 35 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • HOW TO BE POOR AND HOW TO GET RICH — The Choice is Yours
    If after 4 years in a higher institution you’re still roaming the streets looking for a job, you need to hear this: you’ve failed—monumentally.
    Let’s stop pampering mediocrity. We’re in a country where truth sounds like hate because too many people are emotionally allergic to accountability.
    How do we explain that someone who studied Business Administration is now begging a secondary school dropout for job opportunities?
    How do we have graduates of Agriculture going hungry, when food is gold?
    Here's the bitter truth: poverty is not always a curse from the devil; often, it’s a system we’ve bought into with our mindset, our ego, and our excuses.
    Let’s break this down:
    1️⃣ Pride: The Graduate Mentality Trap
    We want soft life. AC offices. Clean suits. Titles. But reality doesn’t pay you for your degree; it pays you for value.
    Artisan jobs are dying. In 10 years, Nigeria may have no more plumbers, welders, painters—everyone is chasing office jobs. Yet, the ones creating generational wealth are those with tools in their hands and solutions in their heads.
    Being a graduate shouldn’t stop you from picking up a skill. The world is changing, but are you?
    2️⃣ Get-Rich-Quick Syndrome
    Everyone wants to hammer, but no one wants to suffer.
    There was a lady in my former church who kept disturbing me about venturing into tech because she heard I make good money. What she didn’t see were my 7 years of trials, the 2 years of no clients, the cancelled N2M deals, the sleepless nights, the rejections.
    You want what people have, but can you handle what they went through?
    Wealth takes time. 5 to 7 years of focused grind—minimum. Stop starting today and expecting harvest tomorrow. That’s not entrepreneurship; that’s fantasy.
    3️⃣ Lack of Mentorship
    We spend millions to learn how to drive. But who teaches us how to make money, live purposefully, or build wealth?
    When Dr. Stephen Akintayo charges for mentorship, people cry scam. Yet they spend the same amount on phones, parties, and clothes. Poverty thrives where knowledge is undervalued.
    Mentorship is not free—it demands money or service. But it shortens your journey by years. Find someone ahead of you and serve your way into wisdom.
    4️⃣ The “Only Me” Mentality
    We compete instead of collaborate. We want to outshine, not uplift. But the wealthiest communities—like the Jews—grow as a unit.
    Africa needs to understand: teamwork will take you farther than talent.
    5️⃣ Lack of Integrity
    Our handshake is not worth a promise. We lie, we cheat, we scam—then pray for breakthrough.
    We must return to honesty, accountability, and trust. You can’t build lasting wealth without a name people can vouch for.
    6️⃣ The Mentality Problem
    Survival Mentality: Just eating and breathing is not the goal of life.
    Receiver’s Mentality: Always collecting, never creating.
    Hunter’s Mentality: Eat today, die tomorrow. No long-term vision.
    7️⃣ The Bandwagon Effect
    You start what’s trending, not what’s purposeful. That’s why we have failed forex traders, half-baked tech bros, and abandoned POS kiosks everywhere.
    Purpose is personal. You must find your lane, not just follow the noise.
    8️⃣ False Priorities
    We put all hope in:
    God (without work)
    Classroom education (without skills)
    Government (without responsibility)
    Faith without works is dead. Education without action is useless. Government without personal accountability is hopeless.
    9️⃣ Mindset is Everything
    Until your mind changes, your life can’t. You cannot carry a poor man’s mentality into a rich man’s future. Wealth starts from within.
    Environment Shapes Destiny
    Your location can limit your vision. Surroundings influence success. You can’t live in a dump and dream of a palace without mental relocation first.
    Move. Change your crowd. Redesign your inputs.
    Until you break these chains, you will remain exactly where you are: educated, frustrated, and broke.
    The choice is yours.
    Be poor. Or rise. Your future is not a prophecy; it’s a decision.

    If this message stirred something in you, do this:

    Like this post
    Drop a comment that says “I choose wealth!”
    Share with someone who needs this brutal truth
    Follow me — Damilola Adewuyi — your personal and business development partner
    Let’s walk this journey together. I share real truths, real strategies, and real steps for growth — no fluff, no gimmicks.
    HOW TO BE POOR AND HOW TO GET RICH — The Choice is Yours 🚨 If after 4 years in a higher institution you’re still roaming the streets looking for a job, you need to hear this: you’ve failed—monumentally. Let’s stop pampering mediocrity. We’re in a country where truth sounds like hate because too many people are emotionally allergic to accountability. How do we explain that someone who studied Business Administration is now begging a secondary school dropout for job opportunities? How do we have graduates of Agriculture going hungry, when food is gold? Here's the bitter truth: poverty is not always a curse from the devil; often, it’s a system we’ve bought into with our mindset, our ego, and our excuses. Let’s break this down: 1️⃣ Pride: The Graduate Mentality Trap We want soft life. AC offices. Clean suits. Titles. But reality doesn’t pay you for your degree; it pays you for value. Artisan jobs are dying. In 10 years, Nigeria may have no more plumbers, welders, painters—everyone is chasing office jobs. Yet, the ones creating generational wealth are those with tools in their hands and solutions in their heads. Being a graduate shouldn’t stop you from picking up a skill. The world is changing, but are you? 2️⃣ Get-Rich-Quick Syndrome Everyone wants to hammer, but no one wants to suffer. There was a lady in my former church who kept disturbing me about venturing into tech because she heard I make good money. What she didn’t see were my 7 years of trials, the 2 years of no clients, the cancelled N2M deals, the sleepless nights, the rejections. You want what people have, but can you handle what they went through? Wealth takes time. 5 to 7 years of focused grind—minimum. Stop starting today and expecting harvest tomorrow. That’s not entrepreneurship; that’s fantasy. 3️⃣ Lack of Mentorship We spend millions to learn how to drive. But who teaches us how to make money, live purposefully, or build wealth? When Dr. Stephen Akintayo charges for mentorship, people cry scam. Yet they spend the same amount on phones, parties, and clothes. Poverty thrives where knowledge is undervalued. Mentorship is not free—it demands money or service. But it shortens your journey by years. Find someone ahead of you and serve your way into wisdom. 4️⃣ The “Only Me” Mentality We compete instead of collaborate. We want to outshine, not uplift. But the wealthiest communities—like the Jews—grow as a unit. Africa needs to understand: teamwork will take you farther than talent. 5️⃣ Lack of Integrity Our handshake is not worth a promise. We lie, we cheat, we scam—then pray for breakthrough. We must return to honesty, accountability, and trust. You can’t build lasting wealth without a name people can vouch for. 6️⃣ The Mentality Problem Survival Mentality: Just eating and breathing is not the goal of life. Receiver’s Mentality: Always collecting, never creating. Hunter’s Mentality: Eat today, die tomorrow. No long-term vision. 7️⃣ The Bandwagon Effect You start what’s trending, not what’s purposeful. That’s why we have failed forex traders, half-baked tech bros, and abandoned POS kiosks everywhere. Purpose is personal. You must find your lane, not just follow the noise. 8️⃣ False Priorities We put all hope in: God (without work) Classroom education (without skills) Government (without responsibility) Faith without works is dead. Education without action is useless. Government without personal accountability is hopeless. 9️⃣ Mindset is Everything Until your mind changes, your life can’t. You cannot carry a poor man’s mentality into a rich man’s future. Wealth starts from within. 🔟 Environment Shapes Destiny Your location can limit your vision. Surroundings influence success. You can’t live in a dump and dream of a palace without mental relocation first. Move. Change your crowd. Redesign your inputs. 💥 Until you break these chains, you will remain exactly where you are: educated, frustrated, and broke. The choice is yours. Be poor. Or rise. Your future is not a prophecy; it’s a decision. ✅ If this message stirred something in you, do this: 👍 Like this post 💬 Drop a comment that says “I choose wealth!” 🔁 Share with someone who needs this brutal truth 👣 Follow me — Damilola Adewuyi — your personal and business development partner 📍Let’s walk this journey together. I share real truths, real strategies, and real steps for growth — no fluff, no gimmicks.
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 32 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • HOW TO BE POOR AND HOW TO GET RICH — The Choice is Yours
    If after 4 years in a higher institution you’re still roaming the streets looking for a job, you need to hear this: you’ve failed—monumentally.
    Let’s stop pampering mediocrity. We’re in a country where truth sounds like hate because too many people are emotionally allergic to accountability.
    How do we explain that someone who studied Business Administration is now begging a secondary school dropout for job opportunities?
    How do we have graduates of Agriculture going hungry, when food is gold?
    Here's the bitter truth: poverty is not always a curse from the devil; often, it’s a system we’ve bought into with our mindset, our ego, and our excuses.
    Let’s break this down:
    1️⃣ Pride: The Graduate Mentality Trap
    We want soft life. AC offices. Clean suits. Titles. But reality doesn’t pay you for your degree; it pays you for value.
    Artisan jobs are dying. In 10 years, Nigeria may have no more plumbers, welders, painters—everyone is chasing office jobs. Yet, the ones creating generational wealth are those with tools in their hands and solutions in their heads.
    Being a graduate shouldn’t stop you from picking up a skill. The world is changing, but are you?
    2️⃣ Get-Rich-Quick Syndrome
    Everyone wants to hammer, but no one wants to suffer.
    There was a lady in my former church who kept disturbing me about venturing into tech because she heard I make good money. What she didn’t see were my 7 years of trials, the 2 years of no clients, the cancelled N2M deals, the sleepless nights, the rejections.
    You want what people have, but can you handle what they went through?
    Wealth takes time. 5 to 7 years of focused grind—minimum. Stop starting today and expecting harvest tomorrow. That’s not entrepreneurship; that’s fantasy.
    3️⃣ Lack of Mentorship
    We spend millions to learn how to drive. But who teaches us how to make money, live purposefully, or build wealth?
    When Dr. Stephen Akintayo charges for mentorship, people cry scam. Yet they spend the same amount on phones, parties, and clothes. Poverty thrives where knowledge is undervalued.
    Mentorship is not free—it demands money or service. But it shortens your journey by years. Find someone ahead of you and serve your way into wisdom.
    4️⃣ The “Only Me” Mentality
    We compete instead of collaborate. We want to outshine, not uplift. But the wealthiest communities—like the Jews—grow as a unit.
    Africa needs to understand: teamwork will take you farther than talent.
    5️⃣ Lack of Integrity
    Our handshake is not worth a promise. We lie, we cheat, we scam—then pray for breakthrough.
    We must return to honesty, accountability, and trust. You can’t build lasting wealth without a name people can vouch for.
    6️⃣ The Mentality Problem
    Survival Mentality: Just eating and breathing is not the goal of life.
    Receiver’s Mentality: Always collecting, never creating.
    Hunter’s Mentality: Eat today, die tomorrow. No long-term vision.
    7️⃣ The Bandwagon Effect
    You start what’s trending, not what’s purposeful. That’s why we have failed forex traders, half-baked tech bros, and abandoned POS kiosks everywhere.
    Purpose is personal. You must find your lane, not just follow the noise.
    8️⃣ False Priorities
    We put all hope in:
    God (without work)
    Classroom education (without skills)
    Government (without responsibility)
    Faith without works is dead. Education without action is useless. Government without personal accountability is hopeless.
    9️⃣ Mindset is Everything
    Until your mind changes, your life can’t. You cannot carry a poor man’s mentality into a rich man’s future. Wealth starts from within.
    Environment Shapes Destiny
    Your location can limit your vision. Surroundings influence success. You can’t live in a dump and dream of a palace without mental relocation first.
    Move. Change your crowd. Redesign your inputs.
    Until you break these chains, you will remain exactly where you are: educated, frustrated, and broke.
    The choice is yours.
    Be poor. Or rise. Your future is not a prophecy; it’s a decision.

    If this message stirred something in you, do this:

    Like this post
    Drop a comment that says “I choose wealth!”
    Share with someone who needs this brutal truth
    Follow me — Damilola Adewuyi — your personal and business development partner
    Let’s walk this journey together. I share real truths, real strategies, and real steps for growth — no fluff, no gimmicks.
    HOW TO BE POOR AND HOW TO GET RICH — The Choice is Yours 🚨 If after 4 years in a higher institution you’re still roaming the streets looking for a job, you need to hear this: you’ve failed—monumentally. Let’s stop pampering mediocrity. We’re in a country where truth sounds like hate because too many people are emotionally allergic to accountability. How do we explain that someone who studied Business Administration is now begging a secondary school dropout for job opportunities? How do we have graduates of Agriculture going hungry, when food is gold? Here's the bitter truth: poverty is not always a curse from the devil; often, it’s a system we’ve bought into with our mindset, our ego, and our excuses. Let’s break this down: 1️⃣ Pride: The Graduate Mentality Trap We want soft life. AC offices. Clean suits. Titles. But reality doesn’t pay you for your degree; it pays you for value. Artisan jobs are dying. In 10 years, Nigeria may have no more plumbers, welders, painters—everyone is chasing office jobs. Yet, the ones creating generational wealth are those with tools in their hands and solutions in their heads. Being a graduate shouldn’t stop you from picking up a skill. The world is changing, but are you? 2️⃣ Get-Rich-Quick Syndrome Everyone wants to hammer, but no one wants to suffer. There was a lady in my former church who kept disturbing me about venturing into tech because she heard I make good money. What she didn’t see were my 7 years of trials, the 2 years of no clients, the cancelled N2M deals, the sleepless nights, the rejections. You want what people have, but can you handle what they went through? Wealth takes time. 5 to 7 years of focused grind—minimum. Stop starting today and expecting harvest tomorrow. That’s not entrepreneurship; that’s fantasy. 3️⃣ Lack of Mentorship We spend millions to learn how to drive. But who teaches us how to make money, live purposefully, or build wealth? When Dr. Stephen Akintayo charges for mentorship, people cry scam. Yet they spend the same amount on phones, parties, and clothes. Poverty thrives where knowledge is undervalued. Mentorship is not free—it demands money or service. But it shortens your journey by years. Find someone ahead of you and serve your way into wisdom. 4️⃣ The “Only Me” Mentality We compete instead of collaborate. We want to outshine, not uplift. But the wealthiest communities—like the Jews—grow as a unit. Africa needs to understand: teamwork will take you farther than talent. 5️⃣ Lack of Integrity Our handshake is not worth a promise. We lie, we cheat, we scam—then pray for breakthrough. We must return to honesty, accountability, and trust. You can’t build lasting wealth without a name people can vouch for. 6️⃣ The Mentality Problem Survival Mentality: Just eating and breathing is not the goal of life. Receiver’s Mentality: Always collecting, never creating. Hunter’s Mentality: Eat today, die tomorrow. No long-term vision. 7️⃣ The Bandwagon Effect You start what’s trending, not what’s purposeful. That’s why we have failed forex traders, half-baked tech bros, and abandoned POS kiosks everywhere. Purpose is personal. You must find your lane, not just follow the noise. 8️⃣ False Priorities We put all hope in: God (without work) Classroom education (without skills) Government (without responsibility) Faith without works is dead. Education without action is useless. Government without personal accountability is hopeless. 9️⃣ Mindset is Everything Until your mind changes, your life can’t. You cannot carry a poor man’s mentality into a rich man’s future. Wealth starts from within. 🔟 Environment Shapes Destiny Your location can limit your vision. Surroundings influence success. You can’t live in a dump and dream of a palace without mental relocation first. Move. Change your crowd. Redesign your inputs. 💥 Until you break these chains, you will remain exactly where you are: educated, frustrated, and broke. The choice is yours. Be poor. Or rise. Your future is not a prophecy; it’s a decision. ✅ If this message stirred something in you, do this: 👍 Like this post 💬 Drop a comment that says “I choose wealth!” 🔁 Share with someone who needs this brutal truth 👣 Follow me — Damilola Adewuyi — your personal and business development partner 📍Let’s walk this journey together. I share real truths, real strategies, and real steps for growth — no fluff, no gimmicks.
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 31 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • The vice President of Nigeria arrived in the UK to receive the body of the former President Buhari. End of Post
    The vice President of Nigeria arrived in the UK to receive the body of the former President Buhari. End of Post
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 34 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • NIGERIANS ARE TOO QUICK TO FORGET.

    This culture of “don’t speak ill of the dead” is exactly why we never learn from our history. We turn funerals into praise worship instead of reflection and mourning into a time of singing praises and showing sudden love to the deceased. Absolute Nonsense!
    Yes, Buhari is gone, but we must reflect. Because HE DID VERY BAD. 100% BAD!!!
    NIGERIANS ARE TOO QUICK TO FORGET. This culture of “don’t speak ill of the dead” is exactly why we never learn from our history. We turn funerals into praise worship instead of reflection and mourning into a time of singing praises and showing sudden love to the deceased. Absolute Nonsense! Yes, Buhari is gone, but we must reflect. Because HE DID VERY BAD. 100% BAD!!!
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 36 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • Vice President Shettima has arrived in London with Gbajabiamila to escort Buhari’s body back to Nigeria after his death.

    Vice President Shettima has arrived in London with Gbajabiamila to escort Buhari’s body back to Nigeria after his death.
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 32 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • Buhari’s body will be returned to Nigeria as cargo consignment, Chidi Odinkalu reminds politicians
    Buhari’s body will be returned to Nigeria as cargo consignment, Chidi Odinkalu reminds politicians
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 28 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • FPMB was the first Nigerian to defeat an incumbent president.
    That will down memory lane in history.
    Rest on legend
    FPMB was the first Nigerian to defeat an incumbent president. That will down memory lane in history. Rest on legend 🙏🙏🙏
    0 Reacties 1 aandelen 47 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • The Untold Story Of Buhari: Secrets You Didn’t Know About Nigeria’s Longest-Serving Leader

    https://youtu.be/fWiouJ9NEDk
    The Untold Story Of Buhari: Secrets You Didn’t Know About Nigeria’s Longest-Serving Leader https://youtu.be/fWiouJ9NEDk
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 25 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • Formar president Muhammadu Bihari will buried in his homdaw Daura Katsina state, according to TVC buhari will be laid today Monday in Daura.buhari passd away in clinic at London where he was receiveng treatment for an undisclosed illness,at 4:30 PM on Sunday.his former Media spokesman,garba sahu , disclose via x on Sunday.meanwhile president Bola amed tinubu mourned passing of his predecessor, dispatcher vice president kashim shettima to London tinubu directed shettima to accompany Buhari,s corpse back to Nigerian for burial
    Formar president Muhammadu Bihari will buried in his homdaw Daura Katsina state, according to TVC buhari will be laid today Monday in Daura.buhari passd away in clinic at London where he was receiveng treatment for an undisclosed illness,at 4:30 PM on Sunday.his former Media spokesman,garba sahu , disclose via x on Sunday.meanwhile president Bola amed tinubu mourned passing of his predecessor, dispatcher vice president kashim shettima to London tinubu directed shettima to accompany Buhari,s corpse back to Nigerian for burial
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 23 Views 0 voorbeeld
  • Two Nigerian-born entrepreneurs, Adebayo “Bayo” Ogunlesi and Tope Awotona, have landed on the prestigious Forbes 2025 list of America’s Richest Immigrants — and their success stories are nothing short of inspiring. Eyes Of Lagos reports,
    Two Nigerian-born entrepreneurs, Adebayo “Bayo” Ogunlesi and Tope Awotona, have landed on the prestigious Forbes 2025 list of America’s Richest Immigrants — and their success stories are nothing short of inspiring. Eyes Of Lagos reports,
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 29 Views 0 voorbeeld
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