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Posted By: Dr. Mike Chidubem

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 842
Obasanjo asked for forgiveness!

It was from my last articles that I dropped the hint that Obj for me is gone at least for now. He's a good lame-duck, therefore, does not deserve me wasting my precious time on him. He came, he left, life continues. whatever he must have achieved in his 8 yrs of wasteful reign we thanked him for that, and all other things he has failed to do, we pray as we look forward for the right messiah.

The issue of forgiveness, I really thought deeply about it, and hesitatingly. For me, I do not wish to, but, something from the subconscious told me that so long as you're a Christian, and someone have asked you to forgive, you should at least for the sake of God, who through His only son and our Lord Jesus Christ, taught us to ask God to forgive our sins as we have forgiven those who trespassed against us. I know that it's a message of peace and love, such messages can only come from the Holy-Ghost. So, I bogged.

I also enjoin all Nigerians who truly have the spirit of God in them to forgive Obj for whatever evil he must have committed against us, we need to do that, if not for anything, just for the salvation of our own souls. May he have a peaceful retirement I pray, amen.


Posted By: Mark Oglagwu

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 854
The Undemocratic Election

Obasanjo together with those he selected the leadership to be inuagrated tomorrow did in good fate. The larger proportion Nigeria electorates are naive and gollible that are not firm as to make decisive and frank choice because of their economic status. The guys that are out to grab the power are mostly boody selfcentred 419ers and rituals who would have taken power if Obasanjo had not done what he did. My only grouse is on Anambara election, he picked the wrong who belong to the group who fought with 3rd term and undemocratic selection missiles. Baba really meant well, may he have good rest in his farm while we await how he controls Yar Adua through the party aparatus.


Posted By: Okey

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 840
OBJ: Worst Leader Ever!

OBJ remains Nigeria's most corrupt and worst leader ever! The world and honest Nigerians have already seen through his anus, which is full of looting and embezzlement of the nation's wealth. Whoever loves him should go to his Ota Farm and enjoy his ill-gotten wealth. No immunity whatsoever for him. He should be tried for massive embezzlement, and locked up in Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison!!!


Posted By: RICKY

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 843
AMADI

If this run away thiefs have nothing to hide why are they running?
Why is the BUHARIS, PAT UTOMIS not also running or are they no more parts of opposition?
Your defence lacks merit because OBJ is also leaving office tommorrow.
You see the truth is that we enjoying peddling falsehood.
Elements like you that supports thiefs will soon be embarrassed in the next couple of days with startling revelation of these guys loot.
You will then appreciate why OBASANJO is fighting corruption.


Posted By: OLLA AYOBAMI

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 839
OBASANJO THE GREAT

For those of us that appreciate the good works this GREAT HERO OF AFRICA has done will miss BABA GREATLY.
He came, he saw,he fought and he conquer.
History and posterity is on your side as the most sucessfull Nigerian leader.
Even your hardened critics will never denied that you are the most patrotic NIGERIAN living or dead.
With the rate you have work for the progress of this country we are rest assured that the fruits of the foundation you have laid will soon begin to materialise.
I know for sure that posterity will judge between you and your critics.
BIG SHAME TO ALL THOSE THAT INSINUATE THAT OBASANJO WILL NOT LEAVE BY MAY 29
ANOTHER BIG SHAME TO FORUMITES THAT CRITICISES OBJ AND COULD NOT SAY AMEN TO MY PRAYERS.
I am greatly suprised that uptill now none of the traditional critics could say amen.
This is the height of insincerity and hypocricy.
MORE SALUTATION TO BABA OF AFRICA FROM MAY 30


Posted By: UDO-INYANG

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 859
Carefully and well-timed human IMPERFECTIONS!

''I'm sorry'' for wilful act(s), of course, is an added bruise to an open wound. Conscience, they say, is an open wound: only TRUTH can heal it!
The aftermath of the 10th fuel increase since democratic inception in 1999 is yet to be shelved, and barely 48hrs journey to exit No 1 seat of a great Nation, Nigeria, was another blow of 15% fuel increment making the 11th to increasinly reduce the standard of living of the majority. Where are we heading to? If we are misrouted into pit toilet in the daytime, what would not occur at night? If I were the President-elect I will decline taking over the wickedness-cursed-mantle of hardship imposition on fellow citizens by virtue.
Well, I think God would rather forgive those whom by themselves chose to be born than made NIGERIANS!


Posted By: Danladi Kowai

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 839
Yar'adu it's up to you

Fellow Nigerians, I wish to remind you of the activities of this regime and how it affects the life of the rural, average (if any) and every comman man and woman in and around Nigerian villages.
Before 1999, Fuel was sold at N11 per litre. Six months after his take over fuel became N20per litre.Within the shortest possible time he increased same to N30per litre. Granted, labour forced him to retract his steps hence it became N22per litre. Shortly after that, it was increased to N26per litre. He fought with labour against his constituency (the electorate) Again he increased fuel to N65per litre. And dishonourable enough, he swore that if only labour will allow N65per litre, that there will be other increase during this his regime.

Now statistically,he increased fuel eight times and his reigned lasted for eight years.
When he stepped in, when he was re-elected, and when he was surposed to hand over.

Again, you will agree with me that OBJ thinks he is dealing with some stupid animals in his farm. He increases these prices with a calculation that will always coincide with one activity or the other. e.g. New year eve, Easther eve, COJA eve e.t.c. Imagine fuel increase with all the political upheavals on ground on the eve of new administration.

Yadadua, it's up to you.


Posted By: JONATHAN

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 883
WHAT IS HE (OBJ) UP TO?

Fellow Nigerian, I wish to ask that we all keep praying against Anti-Nigeria (OBJ). I wonder what he has been up for because during his departure in his (OBJ) Military regime, he bought over OTTA FARM , (Nigerian's Property) and now it is time for his departure again. this time, he has bought over NITEL, NEPA, UNIPETROL, TRANSCORP, CELTEL, Nigeria's Refineries and lots more and has also tasked newly elected leaders in federal, state and local level under thier wicked umbrella to pay in 5% of thier earning (that is, indirectly tasking them to steal state money and bring to him?) Baba, Nawah to u sef!. Please, let us ask God to frustrate Mr. Buyer and his cohorts who dont mean anything good for we citizens.

I wish to use this medium to task the incoming President elect to retrieve all that the "NO CONSCIENCE" man bought over with our money.

I pray that he (Yardua)will not behave like OBJ through all his unconstitutional acts which include illegal impeachment of Governors, no respect for constitution, imposition of candidate on citizens and foremost, rigging of elections, Unconstitutional promotion of His tools both in police and Efcc (Ehindero & Ribadu), Disorganizing our court of laws and muder of Bola Ige whose Spirit is after him now.

I also wish him unending tenure in prison after tomorrow.

sinagod2002@yahoo.com



Posted By: MBUK, J. E. (08033134351)

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 878
Obasanjo seeks forgiveness over 'imperfections'

From the same person, who, just last week, said he had no regrets for his actions?

His ignorance + arrogance = madness must be abating.


Posted By: IFO

Posted On: May 28, 2007
Views: 922
Be Careful Ya' Adua

God has given you the opportunity to lead Nigerians. You are still be person that is praised at Katsina yesterday, please becareful Nigeria is big. I pray that God see you through.

There are much you need to do for Nigerians. Please Abuja is not the correct sampling of the economic situation and measure of the poverty level in Nigeria.

I have been to Katsina where you are from. You know how much you have tried to change the situation of the people of Katsina. To a great extent you have impacted on the people of Katsina as Govr. However you cannot tell me that you don't have any other thing to do for Katsina people as president. So also it should be for all states in Nigeria.

Make your policies to suit the
1.People at the grass-root
2.power
3.Our refineries
4.Education
5.Industry

I know you will deliver, and Nigerians will be happy again.


Posted By: Sheriff Mohammed

Posted On: May 27, 2007
Views: 918
Amadi

It's not a case of silencing the oppositions. Anybody who has no skeleton in his/her cupboard needs not be afraid of any intimidation. Afterall we are not in a military era where we rule by decree. Atiku ran away, Kalu follow, the next will be Tinubu. The fact remains they all have lots to cover up.


Posted By: NKENJIKA K UZOCHUKU

Posted On: May 27, 2007
Views: 909
Grandmasters of the Game

Monday 2nd May, state governors and governors-elect held
a meeting at Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja obviously
to review the just concluded elections with
President-elect Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Some of the
governors walked through the ever-bustling lobby of
the hotel, followed by the usual crowd of aides and
hangers-on. A few others arrived for the meeting
without ceremony, just one or two aides in tow. But
then those in the lobby were too immersed in their own
world – discussing the elections warts and all,
arguing about everything and nothing, gossiping about
the love lives of the men and women of power, or
simply relaxing at the Piano Bar passing the time over
choice drinks – to be bothered by the scheming of the
outgoing, president and incoming governors. That was
the situation until Governor Bola Tinubu came into the
hotel lobby.
As he scurried through the security door and entered
the lift, Tinubu momentarily attracted and arrested
everybody’s attention. There was a general murmur of
approval, a hail of salutation, a wail of admiring
laughter, then some measured applause. Without
stopping in his strides, Tinubu, who was the last
governor to arrive for the meeting and the first to
depart, swam along the tide of acclaim, both hands
above his head waving in acknowledgement, until he
disappeared into the lift. Long after his departure,
almost every group at the hotel lobby was still
discussing the Tinubu phenomenon, how he was able to
hold Lagos despite the desperate desire of President
Olusegun Obasanjo and the ruling Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) to “capture” the state.
A lot has been said and written about the fraud that
was the just concluded general election. It was one
election in which the PDP beat its own record in
electoral rigging by allocating incredible figures to
itself even where voting did not take place. But
somehow, the PDP electoral magic failed to work in
Lagos and Abia States even as it was completely
ineffective in Bauchi. This for me was one of the few
positive things that came out of the polls, the oasis
in the desert of electoral fraud.
Although PDP’s ambition, going by the pre-election
utterances of its leaders, was to win in all the
states, nowhere would the party have derived a more
infinite satisfaction than victory in Lagos. The
reason is as much because of the nature of the state
as the personality of its governor. Lagos is not only
the commercial nerve centre of the country, it has
long overtaken Ibadan as the epicenter of political
activism in the Southwest. Without exercising
political control over Lagos in the last eight years,
PDP cannot be described as a ruling party in every
sense of the word. For the PDP and especially for
Obasanjo, it was bad enough that all the six Southwest
states voted the Alliance for Democracy (AD) all the
way in 1999. That was why Obasanjo deployed every
weapon at his disposal to break the Afenifere hold on
the South-west, using a combination of guile, divide
and rule, and massive force. Even then, Lagos escaped
the clutches of the PDP in the 2003 elections. In
obvious frustration, the PDP government embarked on
the modern version of scorched earth policy in its
relationship with the state government. The Federal
Government attacked the Lagos government on different
fronts. For several months, it withheld local
government funds due to the state from the Federation
Account despite a Supreme Court ruling that it had no
power to so do. It refused to support the state
government on any initiative requiring the centre’s
collaboration to succeed. It empowered, if not
mandated, then Minister of Works Adeseye Ogunlewe to
confront and frustrate the state government and its
agencies. It embarked on a muck raking of corruption,
and malfeasance against the governor. The goal for all
this appeared simple enough – make it impossible for
Tinubu to perform so Lagosians would seek a change in
another party, with the PDP positioned to be the
beneficiary.
Tinubu, however, rose up to every trick in the book.
Exploiting the advantage of having a better team in
propaganda dissemination, in strategic thinking, in
political brinkmanship, the Lagos State government
successfully attributed every of its failing to the
meanness of the President and his administration.
Tinubu’s antecedents also came in handy. A veteran of
many political battles, Tinubu returned from US as a
general in the NADECO (National Democratic Coalition)
army to pick the AD governorship ticket in Lagos
State. Shortly after he was sworn in as governor in
1999, he had to fight perhaps the greatest battle of
his political life when he was accused of perjury. He
survived and took on Obasanjo and the PDP. The Lagos
government fought many legal battles against the PDP.
Tinubu also fought Obasanjo in the court of public
opinion. Unlike many of his brother governors, he
refused to accept the “Babarisation” of the
presidency. He had the courage to condemn presidential
excesses at all times and never spared Obasanjo
whenever the President trampled on the constitution or
disobeyed court orders. By refusing to be a good boy
to the President, Tinubu became a darling of the
people. Every attempt of the Federal Government to
straddle him and his administration hardened him the
more and further endeared him to the people. With the
cowboy antics of its leaders in the state, the PDP
held less and less an appeal to Lagosians every
passing day. So sure was Tinubu of the support of his
people that he left AD for Action Congress (AC). So
confident was he of his politics that he imposed a
governorship candidate on the party and despite the
protests of his associates, was unfazed. At the end of
the day Tinubu inflicted on PDP the heaviest defeat in
Lagos since 1999.
In Abia State’s Governor Orji Uzor Kalu, Tinubu has a
soul mate in political sophistication. Like Tinubu,
Kalu has the courage to stand to his convictions. Even
as a member of the PDP, he stood up to Obasanjo,
publicly challenging the President’s unconstitutional
actions as well as the dishonesty and double standards
in the administration’s anti-corruption war. Although
his political struggles may not have been formed in
the furnace of any abiding principles, Kalu never lost
his voice in the face of injustice from the temple of
power. He harried Obasanjo and attacked the PDP for
every infraction. Always he spoke with the direct
frankness of an “Aba Boy.” Although Abia is not
particularly strategic in the country’s political
equation, Obasanjo and PDP would have been more than
happy to take the state and put Kalu to shame.
Following the PDP’s revalidation of membership, Kalu
left the party to form the Progressive Peoples
Alliance (PPA) on which platform he contested the
presidency. I do not want to believe that Kalu saw his
achievements in his eight years of stewardship in Abia
State as a good enough testimonial to seek for higher
office. Neither do I even want to think he saw himself
as capable of winning the presidential election even
if the polls were free. Considering his unequivocal
championing of Igbo cause in the last eight years,
Kalu may be content, for now, to be in pole position
for Igbo leadership after Emeka Ojukwu. What better
way to achieve this than to be the alpha and omega in
the only Igbo state not in the clutches of PDP! Even
the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), a known
Igbo party, did not make any impact in the polls. In
any case Kalu speaks the language of the average Igbo
man. He has their directness and understands their
sensibilities. When weeks before the election I asked
him the chances of his party in the state, he promised
to resign as governor if Chief Onyeama Ugochukwu of
PDP garnered 30 percent of the votes. Kalu’s
candidate, Theodore Orji, though detained by the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) weeks
before the elections, still won the polls.
Politicians like Tinubu and Kalu, men who have the
common touch and are at one with their people, are
unfortunately uncommon in this dispensation. Men who
could match the PDP’s visible and invisible powers and
still come tops are indeed grandmasters of the game.
Were other opposition politicians as astute, there
would have been less acrimony accompanying the polls.
kenn_jeane@yahoo.co.uk


Posted By: NKENJIKA K UZOCHUKU

Posted On: May 27, 2007
Views: 868
PDP,s dirty war






PDP dirty war

Kalu, Tinubu as Last Action heroes
By Louis Odion [louisodion@sunnewsonline.com]
Sunday, April 22, 2007

So, despite the acquisition of thousands of AK-47, threat of Tsunami, thunderous invocation of “do-or-die” (aka ‘Operation Totality’), last-minute shuffle of electoral umpires, financial blockade, Field Marshal Olusegun Obasanjo would still lose the most crucial of all on April 14: the battle of Lagos.

So after the chilling parade of its Howitzers in Abia, the lightning of Apache bombers, bombast of its generals and the earthquake of the land chariots, ancient Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would still receive a colossal pounding from a debutant Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA). More tellingly, PPA’s gubernatorial candidate, Theodore Orji (who defeated PDP’s Onyeama Ugochukwu) has been in EFCC’s custody for the past three months!

But like a punch-drunk boxer, Abia PDP leaders have since been thrashing in all directions, unsure of the hand that had done them in. The Abia Resident Electoral Commissioner has, for instance, formally intimated the Inspector General of threat to his life by enraged Abia PDP leaders. Specifically, he accused the party state chairman of attempting to shove him out of an Aero aircraft in Abuja Monday for “rigging the elections for Governor Orji Kalu”.

The full story of the April 14 guber elections is certainly yet untold. The days ahead promise to be momentous indeed as the nation tries to come to grips with the sheer magnitude of what is now widely regarded as PDP’s electoral heist in many states, breaking all the records it earlier set in 2003 in rigging. In Edo State, for instance, the story is told of how the ruling party stole too much for the proverbial owner not to notice.

Not surprising, Benin City and other Edo towns burned for most parts of last week.
Obviously, the proverbial brigand in this circumstance had miscalculated. Otherwise, he would have realized the futility in purloining a pauper’s only fowl: the whole community will soon hear through relentless nagging of the dispossessed. How possibly could anyone have plotted to rig out Adams Oshiomhole, a whole former NLC president and veteran of countless labour skirmishes, and still hope to sleep peacefully at night?

But what the Lagos and Abia cases clearly demonstrate is how PDP’s otherwise awesome “rigging machine” can become impotent under civic vigilance (resistance is too incendiary) within that Bermuda Triangle of the polling station, collation centre and the INEC central office. Stung by this outcome, it will be out of character if Abuja did not, therefore, intensify its punitive actions against the opposition governments in both states between now and May 29.

In Lagos, the president himself, having reportedly kept vigil all night with his war council after the elections and dazed by the initial signals from the battlefront, had to quickly hop into a waiting presidential jet Sunday afternoon en-route Abuja, timely enough before INEC broke the “sad news” and the AC jubilant crowd pouring onto the streets with their trademark brooms. Remotely, there seems a parallel between the dramatic triumph of the new political superman of Lagos, Nigeria’s biggest state, and the spectacular exploits of the protagonist of a popular movie entitled “The Last Action Hero” by Arnold Schwarzenegger, once Hollywood superman, now the governor of California, America’s biggest state. It is the story of exceptional courage against fire, daring amid peril.

From his pronouncements and actions before April 14, no one was left in doubt that Obasanjo badly coveted Lagos for sundry reasons ranging from prestige to strategy and symbolism. Post-May 29, patriarch Obasanjo certainly craves a wider turf. With that territory still under “enemy” command, it, for instance, would be a miracle if, after office, the impetuous Owu generalissimo would still not have to depend on a full regiment of bodyguards to navigate Lagos streets for fear of being stoned or molested by the ubiquitous Area Boys as the man who withheld their council funds for two years.

Being the nation’s economic nerve-centre and often acclaimed as the microcosm of the nation itself, Lagos remains the ultimate trophy. Winning it would, therefore, have complemented his conquest of the South-west initiated with the political hurricane of 2003, thereby signposting Obasanjo ascendancy in Yorubaland completely as successor to the vanishing Awo clan.

That Awo is still revered in death today is only a reminder of the extent he had dominated the length and breadth of Yorubaland while he lived.
Obasanjo’s own permutations clearly went up in smokes penultimate Saturday. But only poor students of history would have failed to anticipate PDP’s routing in Lagos for the third time (1999, 2003 and 2007). Behind Lagos politics surely is a progressive tradition rooted in the shared struggles of the radicals and the fiercely vocal media industrial complex which, coincidentally, is also resident. It is a partnership that dates back to anti-colonial agitation and the resistance of military dictatorship in post-colonial Nigeria.

Given this formidable coalition before an equally critical voting public, it is, therefore, often difficult to steal votes in Lagos or for electoral outcome not to conform to that fixed progressive template.
Only once (in 1991) was that illustrious chain broken with the emergence of conservative Sir Michael Otedola as governor by default. He turned out a beneficiary after an implosion within the progressive camp. Of course, the mismatch turned out a catastrophe as the dovish Catholic knight was virtually held hostage by the opposition-dominated House of Assembly for the twenty-three months the Third Republic lasted.

In Lagos, as far as power contest is concerned, what really counts is the force of idea. This is the first point PDP failed in Lagos. In terms of articulation of ideas, the party failed to marshal an argument superior to that of the rival it sought to displace. This gross ideological inadequacy would seem a spin-off of the persona of its own new patron saint, Obasanjo. Subjected to even the mere ritual of codification, Obasanjoism is, despite the revolutionary advances it may have recorded in some sectors of our national life, still largely obtuse, lacking in both theoretical grounding and ideological definition. No wonder, its academy only attracts political braggarts and eunuchs like Bode George.

With his personal charm, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro could have gone farther with the Lagos crowd. But he chose the wrong company. Having spent the last six months traversing the length and breadth of his own homeland on the husting, it is doubtful if Koro will, in his heart of hearts, be quite happy today with Federal Government’s total abdication of responsibility in the state in terms of maintenance of federal infrastructure, let alone the provision of social amenities. Yet, the state accounts for more than sixty percent of the nation’s economic activities and contributes as much to the national coffers in terms of revenue.

While flagging off their presidential campaign in Lagos the other day, the PDP leaders did not consider it offensive to public sensibilities by openly telling Lagosians that the neglect of the state was deliberate because of “Tinubu’s confrontational attitude”. Residents of Victoria Island, for instance, daily lived with the fear of ocean surge. In fact, two years ago, the bar beach overflowed, submerging most of the high-rise buildings on the front-line. The state government was abandoned to its own device to reverse a potentially calamitous situation. Abuja more or less looked the other way.

Horrendous as the environmental challenges of Lagos with estimated 15 million population have been, Abuja has for years excluded the state from the beneficiaries of ecological funds. Lagos councils are still being starved of their statutory allocations amounting to N14 billion even after a Supreme Court judgement. The network of federal roads is left to decay. I live in Lagos myself and so am in a position to tell where the shoe pinches.

True, Tinubu may have his own shortcomings. But it is unconscionable to have reduced the fate of Lagos to the banality of politics, especially considering its cosmopolitan nature. How then could PDP have expected public love in a province it knowingly starved in the past eight years?
This same message is what seems encoded by its routing in Abia. “Federal might” (euphemism for the monopoly of the instruments of coercion) also failed abysmally there on April 14. Indeed, before then, no measure was considered too extreme or weapon too cruel by Abuja to project Orji and his mentor, Governor Orji Kalu, in bad lights as “the public enemies in Abia.” When the PDP presidential campaign train stopped in Umuahia last month, for instance, Obasanjo personally abused Kalu as “a failure” and “disrespectful” with a view to inciting voters against him.

One after the other, all the party gerontocrats took the microphone to pour invectives on the youthful warrior from Igberre who was not even physically present at the stadium. You would think the rally was to abuse Kalu rather than market the Yar’Adua/Jonathan ticket. But what they failed to show the Umuahia crowd that day was the list of projects the Federal Government had executed even when Abia was still a PDP territory. The truth is that there is little or nothing on the ground to advertise.

At personal level, Abuja’s clampdown on Kalu is no less vicious. Today, almost all the thriving businesses he had before coming to power have been strangulated through official policy of poisoning. SLOK Airline was banished from the Nigerian air-space barely five weeks after take-off over a flimsy charge, with a fleet of aircraft procured on lease from western creditors grounded in Lagos for months.

But following the announcement of results last Sunday that Kalu’s PPA had won an election conducted by an umpire appointed by Aso Rock, spontaneous jubilations seized the whole of Aba, Umuahia and other key centres as people poured on the streets, thus demonstrating who truly is more popular between Kalu and the Abuja-based PDP commanders. Surely, if the people truly believed all the fabulous yarns spurn by Abuja, they certainly would not have voted PPA overwhelmingly in Abia that day. In 2003, Kalu similarly retained Abia for PDP in spite of the skullduggery of the Abuja overlords.
All told, there is a big lesson to be learnt from the development in Lagos and Abia on April 14. There is a reward in being consistent, though the price is high.

The governors of Abia and Lagos never wavered in opposing Obasanjo based on some principles. But not many of their colleagues dared look the roaring lion of Aso Rock in the eyes. They were always too ready to compromise even when hurting, either out of fear for their own political lives or in anticipation of gains which time has proved to be transient in any case. It shows that might is not always right. Surely, he who has not discovered what he could die for politically is not fit to aspire for leadership. As in the Kalu case, it is possible for the state to seek to deliberately destroy you economically. But there is always one thing the oppressor can’t take away: your spirit. To live in the hearts of the people, therefore, is to be rich in what money can’t buy: love.


Posted By: NKENJIKA K UZOCHUKU

Posted On: May 27, 2007
Views: 838
I HAVE FUFILLED ALL MY PROHPESIES ON KALU

I THINK I HAVE FUFILLED ALL MY PROHPESIES ON KALU
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I think i have fufilled all my prophesies in Abia and Imo states, when you take a look on this forum if you can be sincere enough you will know and see that i have fufilled all my prophesies on Abia Imo and Chief Dr Kalu, starting from the day i entered this forum i dont think i have contributed enough to any other other than PPA,KALU, T.A ORJI and Imo politics, a lot of people had said all sort of things concerning the role iam playing in this forum on issues concerning KALU but the more they say the more my spirit is beeing straightened, iam not a pastor but i have one spirit in me that what ever i said and prayed for must surelly come to pass, for instace i warnned EFCC to stop harrassing Kalu and they seized, i prophesied that T.A will win Abia guber polls, i commanded the power that be as at yesterday to let t.a Orji go on my first time to comment on his detaintion and he was let go, i prophesied failure to ARARUME and it come to pass, i prophesied failure to former NDDC chairman and he failed and now he is crying foul, my advice to him is to go and rest he is a big disappointment to NDDC AND NDIGBO in general what did he do when he was NDDC chairman, he use his position there to enrich him self with out doing nothing in Imo and Abia talkless of other remaining 7 NDDC States, i,m saying it without fear or favour that Kalu remains BUSH , BILL GATES and BLAIR of my time Ndigbo have to know this that the young Kalu is something in Igboland, Kalu is the face of new generation in igboland and in nigeria whether you like it or not i will always say it, PPA was like a dead party nobody knows of it not untill Kalu entered into it early this year the party came back to life, any igboman today who feels that kalu is bad is doing so without reality, its only the enemies of ndigbo and federal hired guns that can see kalu as a bad person, iam not from Abia state but i thank God for giving indigbo a worthy son like Kalu, just 47 years on earth the little but mighty kalu is shaking the whole south east and nigeria at large with his popularity, My beloved IBB once said that kalu is the fastest growing politician in this country, if any igboman doubt it let him come out lets go to Okpara sqare Enugu and we will test him or her with Kalu, you see sometimes i use to look at OJUKWU and i can say anything agaisnt him because of the respect i have for him, but Ojukwu himself is disappointing me, OJUKWU is like God in igboland infact i dont know what to say because i made it as a vow not to castigate any one who is fighting for the right of igbos let me keep that aside but IKEMBA should wakeup he is not playing the role we expected him to play with his age now and i can tell you now that Kalu has taken that role daring devils and its cohorts, when you dare devil and its agents that means you say to them go to hell, as iam talking to you today iam not a university graduate but iam now in university by studying Kalu and when i finishe studying him then you will see another Kalu will come out of South east, i have been studying him for the last 7 years ago and as soon as iam through you will see that another younger OUK has emerged, but the diffrent is that mine will be NUK while Kalu,s own remains OUK, my prayers has been God give me power mind and straighnt to be like Kalu to fight for the right of igbos, my advice to the former NDDC chairman is for him to go and relax let him go and relax in his mantions with the bilions he stoled when he was the chairman of the commission, he is fighthing a lost battle, he was ashemed because he lost the guber polls though he has the right to challange Chief Orji,s victory but that should be in the trabunal not on pages of newspaper with unfounded allegations, before i go i want to use this hour to thank the court that granted T.A Orji bail yesterday, its victory upon victories and its just the begining, go through this forum if you are a doubting thomas you got to see my topics on all these issues i talked about today and you will indeed know that i have fufilled my prophesies on KALU, i have not gotten kobo from anybody in doing all these but i know that Kalu will remember me one day atleast take me as a mouthpiece or OTINKPU in his campaign for a better indigbo in scheme of things in Nigeria.
All the igbo people who are working against the general intrest of igbos you are warnned to desist from it or else i will course you all.
Thanks.
NKEMJIKA UZOCHUKU.
kenn_jeane@yahoo.co.uk


Posted By: NKENJIKA K UZOCHUKU

Posted On: May 27, 2007
Views: 833
AMADI ARE YOU SURE????????

Amadi,
Are you just joking or serious of what you are saying about Kalu? please be sincere ok, where do you get the news that kalu has ran away? hit me back here ok.
NKEMJIKA UZOCHUKU.
Kenn_jeane@yahoo.co.uk


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