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Desist from attacking clergymen or face legal action,* group warns Verydarkman

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*Desist from attacking clergymen or face legal action,* group warns Verydarkman

 

 

A group of Niger Delta ex-agitators has issued a stern warning to social media influencer, Martins Vincent Otse (aka Verydarkman), to desist from attacking clergymen, particularly Prophet Godwin Ikuru of Jehovah Eye Salvation Ministry.

 

 

The group, led by General Ebikoro Akpokanwei (aka Big Daddy), described Verydarkman as “disrespectful” and vowed to take decisive legal action against him if he continues to drag Prophet Ikuru’s name through the mud.

 

 

The ex-agitators stated that Prophet Ikuru is a respected man of God and will not be disparaged without consequences

 

 

They accused Verydarkman of having a history of attacking religious leaders, including Prophet Jeremiah Fufeyin, and warned him that his actions would not go unchallenged.

 

 

The group emphasised that they would not allow Verydarkman to sow discord and destroy the country with his negative words and actions. They praised Prophet Ikuru for his credible reputation in serving God and humanity.

 

 

Prophet Godwin Ikuru is not one of those fallible individuals and personalities he drags on social media under the guise of gaining influence and playing to the gallery.

 

 

We vow that nobody will touch the image of Prophet Godwin Ikuru and go Scott free. Verydarkman continuously attacked the founder of Christ Mercyland Deliverance Ministries, Prophet Jeremiah Fufeyin on social unhindered.

 

 

“We have followed his pages on social media and discovered he had nothing to offer other than fault-finding and dragging. If left unchallenged and cautioned, he would plant a seed of discord that will destroy this country.

 

 

“Most people know Prophet Godwin Ikuru as a man, who has built a credible reputation for himself in the areas of service to God and humanity,” the statement read

Sahara weekly online is published by First Sahara weekly international. contact saharaweekly@yahoo.com

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Nigeria at a Crossroads: The Struggle of the Ordinary Citizen Amidst Systemic Failures

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Nigeria at a Crossroads: The Struggle of the Ordinary Citizen Amidst Systemic Failures

By George Omagbemi Sylvester

Nigeria is tottering under the weight of its own contradictions. A nation richly endowed with natural resources and blessed with an energetic, youthful population has become a shadow of its potential. The ordinary Nigerian today is trapped in a vicious web of misgovernance, corruption and state failure; gasping for air amid deepening economic hardship, relentless insecurity and collapsing institutions.

From the buzzing motor parks of Lagos to the broken classrooms of Zamfara, one question echoes across every corner of this troubled land: How did we get here?

1. Infrastructure in Ruins: A Nation That Can’t Move Forward
From Lagos to Maiduguri, the country’s roads have become death traps, riddled with potholes and unmarked craters. Port Harcourt’s East-West Road, once the artery of the oil-rich Niger Delta, now swallows vehicles during the rainy season. Across the country, street lights flicker uselessly, bridges collapse without warning and public transport remains a nightmare.

The electricity crisis is perhaps the biggest embarrassment of all. Despite over $25 billion sunk into the sector since 1999, Nigeria still generates a shameful 4,000 megawatts of electricity for over 200 million people. In comparison, South Africa; less than half our population produces over 40,000 MW. Tinubu’s government recently installed ₦10 billion worth of solar panels at Aso Rock, while the rest of Nigeria languishes in darkness.

As comedian I Go Dye sarcastically put it: “Light no dey, road no dey, water no dey, but dem go still tell us say change dey. Na wa for una change oh!”

2. Education and Healthcare: Abandoned Foundations
Nigeria’s education sector has collapsed under the weight of decades of neglect. Over 20 million children are out of school; the highest number globally. Public schools are dilapidated with leaking roofs, broken chairs and overworked teachers. Strikes by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) are more consistent than school calendars.

The healthcare sector is in worse shape. Many primary healthcare centres are glorified mortuaries, lacking basic drugs and equipment. State hospitals are crumbling. And while the average Nigerian dies in poorly ventilated wards, our leaders jet off to Europe for even routine checkups on public funds.

The World Health Organization ranks Nigeria 163rd out of 191 countries in health system performance. Between 2021 and 2023, over 5,600 Nigerian doctors migrated abroad, fleeing poor wages and unsafe working conditions.

Comedian AY Makun once joked: “In Nigeria, if you no get money and you fall sick, just lie down and start writing your will.” That joke now feels less like comedy and more like prophecy.

3. Insecurity: A Country Under Siege
No part of Nigeria is safe. In the northeast, Boko Haram and ISWAP continue to terrorize communities. In the northwest, bandits and kidnappers rule forests and highways. The middle belt suffers deadly farmer-herder clashes. The southeast is caught between separatist agitators and brutal state crackdowns. And all across the country, cultism, armed robbery, and ritual killings have become daily realities.

According to SBM Intelligence, over 15,000 Nigerians were killed by non-state actors between 2020 and 2023. Farmers are too afraid to go to their fields, worsening hunger and food shortages. Our IDP camps are overcrowded, underfunded, and dangerously unsanitary; turning humanitarian shelters into prisons of misery.

Veteran journalist Kadaria Ahmed aptly noted: “The failure of the Nigerian state to protect its citizens is the greatest indictment of any government.” Yet, the political class marches on with fanfare, oblivious to the carnage around them.

4. Economic Brutality: Starving the People in the Name of Reform
When President Bola Tinubu removed fuel subsidies and floated the naira in 2023, he declared it a “bold reform.” But for ordinary Nigerians, it triggered an economic earthquake. Fuel prices tripled, transport costs skyrocketed and food inflation surged past 35%. Today, over 70 million Nigerians live in extreme poverty.

The World Bank reported that inflation alone pushed four million Nigerians into poverty in just six months of 2023. In northern states, floods destroyed 1.6 million hectares of farmland, enough food to feed 13 million people for a year, according to Reuters. In Borno, the dam collapse compounded Boko Haram’s destruction, forcing thousands into IDP camps now dependent on foreign aid to survive.

As Femi Falana, SAN, rightly observed: “Economic policies must be for the benefit of the people, not just foreign investors or IMF advisers.” In Tinubu’s Nigeria, the rich get tax waivers, and the poor are told to endure.

5. Political Manipulation: Democracy in Name, Tyranny in Practice
Under the APC, democracy is little more than a slogan. Opposition figures are harassed or lured with appointments. Political defectors are welcomed with open arms while anti-graft agencies conveniently “forget” their past.

The declaration of emergency rule in Rivers State after suspicious pipeline explosions is the latest example. Rather than investigate the sabotage, Tinubu suspended the elected governor and installed a retired naval officer as “sole administrator.” Critics call it a political coup masked as crisis management.

Broadcaster Rufai Oseni summed it up best: “We are not just losing faith in government. We are watching the burial of democracy with our own eyes.”

6. The Nigerian Spirit: Laughter in the Face of Pain
In spite of it all, Nigerians continue to laugh. Not because life is good, but because laughter is often the last form of protest. It is our therapy. Our resilience. Our rebellion.

Comedian Gordons once said: “Dem say make we endure, make we no talk. If dem born us well, make dem try endure the way we dey endure for just one week.” The audience laughed. But deep down, we all knew he was telling the truth.

7. A Blueprint for Rebirth: A Nation Must Rise
Enough is enough. Nigeria needs radical surgery; not cosmetic reforms.

Civic Responsibility: Citizens must resist vote-buying, challenge tyranny and speak truth to power.

Institutional Reform: The judiciary, civil service and anti-corruption agencies must be depoliticized and professionalized.

Security Overhaul: Adopt community policing, retrain the armed forces and prioritize intelligence over brute force.

Economic Justice: Introduce safety nets. Subsidize agriculture. Tax wealth. Empower the informal sector.

Human Capital Investment: A nation that abandons its youth and teachers is digging its own grave.

8. A Choice Before Us:
Nigeria stands at a dangerous fork in the road. One path leads to the total breakdown of order, Somalia-style chaos. The other leads to healing, though it will require sacrifice, courage and unity.

Leaders must stop governing for the elite alone. Citizens must awaken from political slumber. The house is on fire. We can’t keep laughing through our tears. We must rise.

As the legendary Chinua Achebe once said: “The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership.” But the solution lies not just in changing the leaders; it lies in changing what we tolerate, what we demand, and what we’re willing to fight for.

Let Nigeria rise again; not for the few who dwell in comfort behind government gates, but for the many who dream of a country that works.

Nigeria at a Crossroads: The Struggle of the Ordinary Citizen Amidst Systemic Failures
By George Omagbemi Sylvester

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ODUDUWA INTEGRITY ASSOCIATION LAUNCHES TO RECLAIM YORUBA DIGNITY, DRIVE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EMANCIPATION

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ODUDUWA INTEGRITY ASSOCIATION LAUNCHES TO RECLAIM YORUBA DIGNITY, DRIVE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EMANCIPATION.

Clement Emmanuel

“The rebirth of Yoruba integrity has begun, and it is a call to action for all our people.” — Engr. Omotoso Banji Victor, National President

A powerful new movement dedicated to the unity, progress, and full emancipation of the Yoruba people has emerged with the formal launch of the Oduduwa Integrity Association. This new socio-political and cultural organization aims to restore the dignity of the Yoruba nation through coordinated efforts in education, agriculture, infrastructure, culture, and social services.

At the helm of the organization is Evangelist/Engineer/Honourable Omotoso Banji Victor, who has been unanimously elected as the National President by a carefully selected and diverse Board of Trustees. The Board comprises distinguished individuals drawn from academia, politics, traditional institutions, and the clergy.

Other members of the Board include:

Chief (Dr.) Adeola Ajibade, veteran educationist and cultural historian

Mrs. Funmilayo Akintunde, grassroots mobilizer and development advocate

Bishop Dr. Akinyele Olatunji, spiritual leader and peace ambassador

Comrade Tunde Ogunbiyi, youth leader and technology promoter

Alhaji Wasiu Ajani, agribusiness expert and former local council chairman

The mission of the Oduduwa Integrity Association is rooted in the need to reposition the Yoruba people economically, socially, and culturally. The Association is launching with programs that will offer scholarships to indigent students, establish community-based food banks, promote agriculture, improve regional transport, and protect the cultural values of the Yoruba race.

Addressing the press during the inauguration ceremony, National President Engr. Omotoso Banji Victor passionately stated:
“This association was born out of a deep cry in the hearts of our people. Too many Yoruba communities are suffering from neglect, insecurity, and lack of opportunities. We are stepping forward to say—no more! No more silence, no more division, and no more decay. We are here to restore hope, dignity, and progress.”

He continued, “From Ibadan to Ijebu, from Akure to Ilorin, our people deserve better. And we will not rest until the Yoruba people regain their pride in education, their strength in enterprise, and their place in national discourse. This is not just a mission; it is a movement.”

Chief (Dr.) Adeola Ajibade, a respected educationist and member of the board, emphasized the educational focus of the Association. “We cannot claim to be building the future if we ignore our children. Education is the lifeblood of any progressive people. Through this Association, we will invest in our youth—ensuring they have access to the knowledge and resources that will prepare them to lead the Yoruba nation to greater heights.”

Bishop Dr. Akinyele Olatunji, also a board member, spoke on the spiritual and cultural dimensions of the Association’s mission. “We believe that true development must be holistic. As we pursue economic growth and educational advancement, we will also strengthen our moral and spiritual foundations. Integrity is our name and our path.”

The Oduduwa Integrity Association is calling on all the political leaders and traditional rulers in yourba land to team up and support the leading Yoruba integrity Association. The organization promises to be a rallying point for all well-meaning Yoruba individuals and institutions committed to the restoration of the people’s dignity and the building of a prosperous and unified future.

As Engr. Omotoso aptly summarized, “This is not about politics. It is about purpose. It is about our people. It is about a new dawn for the Yoruba nation.”

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Destined For Greatness: RCCG Anounces May 2025 Holy Ghost Congress, South-West Workers Meeting

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*Destined For Greatness: RCCG Anounces May 2025 Holy Ghost Congress, South-West Workers Meeting*

 

The monthly Holy Ghost Congress of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, RCCG, for the month of May 2025, promises to be life-changing.

With the theme for the month being ‘Destined for Greatness’. The program, which will be held at the Redemption City, Km 46 Lagos-Ibadsn expressway, Ogun State, Nigeria, on Friday 2nd of May, 2025, will start at 7:00pm wat.

Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye and other anointed men of God will be ministering at the power packed program.

According to the Church’s administrators, there will also be South West workers meeting immediately after the program with Daddy G.O.

All South-West workers of RCCG are enjoined to attend this all-important meeting.

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