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DONALD TRUMP IS AMERICAN PRESIDENT, MEDIA SHUTUP OR GET SHUTDOWN; Prof. Alexia Thomas Demands

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Why Russia Death Merchant Viktor Bout Told Trump To Flee To Russia 

 

 

What is the Problem with US Democrats and Democratic Party?

Why Attack with Offensive Vocalism to Undo President Donald Trump?

Every Leader has Executive Power, Indispensable Status, the Audaciousness and the Veritas of Authority to Govern as he Pleases.

What is the FBI Story?

What is the Inquiry?

What is the Inquest and What is the Investigation?

 

The Tempestuous Of Liberty Is A Man’s Birth Rights Not To Be Subjected To Another Man’s Will, If The Rule Prevails Not. — By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas

 

The act to stop Trump Leadership is an Opposition Party Covert Operation in Democrat Monstrousity Agenda to Divide America. The Media has no business with White House Affairs. The Opposition Party is plotting to impeach Donald Trump by funding the American Media to continually make Provocative Statements against Donald Trump. This is simply Madness in a Turmoil in a Bottle.

 

ILLOGICAL ENTRAPMENT

 

Democrat Politicians get to Behave Themselves.

The Ponderosity of Mr. Trump seem a Mayhem and Threat to Democrats who Governed America with False Directions.

Mr. Donald Trump will and cannot be Impeached. So, Democrats stop Fuming Hate and allow Republican Party Rule as now is their own Centre Stage. Hence, Parties are Rivals, then Media Houses Shutupand Do not take sides or be ready to be Shutout of Business.

 

I asked the Democratic Party and the American Medias to stop the ‘Political Cajole Of Malice, Stop the Political Jeopardy, Stop all Political Hindrances, Stop the Political Menaces and equally Stop the Junta Politics and finally must Stop the Rivalry Hunt Fierce’.

 

WHAT IS AMERICA?

 

America is a failed Republic enacted by the Will of the Conquest of Men in denial of Divine Right of Kingsafter the Beheading of King Charles I in 1649.So, the sons of Britain sought their own Independence, a Destructive Sovereignty leading to the Creation of United States of America in her Lust Illusional Concept of Democracy preempting Capitalism the Wreck of Menin Supremacy of Equality surging Inequality.

 

I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas have seen the Recklessness of the American Media fuming with Unfounded Statements to disrupt Mr. Trump Presidency. The American Media is Sponsored in my view by Politicians without an iota of doubt from the Democratic Party.

 

The American Media has now become Pen Terrorists, a Mayhem to the Government by theirProvocative Statements made against the President of America. Irrespective of Donald Trump views and Agenda for his Will of Change, no one has the right to criticize him or make a Mediocrity of him. His Government has not hurt the American People, his Views are Coherent with his Cabinet.

 

Media Hates Him, because he is Pragmatic, so in simple definition go off him. Those who like him accept his Views, then what is wrong with the Media Views.

Do Media have the Right to infringe on White House Prologs?, certainly No.

Who is then the Media?

A vehicle to Transport Information governed by the Power of Government.

 

The Government Action Is Always Justified As No Leader Is Mad, But Has Autonomy Of The Law To Lead As He Wills. – By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas

 

AMERICA IMMIGRATION LAW AND TRUMP VIEWS ONALIEN INVASION

 

President Donald Trump views to net Illegal Migrants out of America, though the word illegal is a Tautology as no Human is Contraband, but simply is not a reason to hate him. I strictly warned the American Media to stay off President Trump’s Pitch or be ready to face the Brunt of the Law.

 

Power is a Rank of Authority and Position isa Limitation of Right. — By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas

 

President Donald Trump has Autonomy of the Law to Rule as he Wills, so the Media must stay off his Boundaries. Trump is Votedin Power by the Act of Democracy, so Anarchists your tears are coming late. Emotion will not wreckedthe movement of the Terrains, so Haters of Trump just must lay their Trumpets of Ghastly venom or be ready to be hit by their own Poison. Nothing has spoilt other than the Float of Action has a time to expire,so simply  Americanshave a choice not to vote Trump again.

 

President Donald Trump is in Power, so every American should live with it, for the better, for the hurt or harsh, hence Democracy is by Count of majority, then the Will of Multitude is Right, so Trump is then not as bad as labelled.

 

The Media intrusion in President DonaldTrump Leadership is a premeditated attempt to disrupt his Government, a trap and decoy to impeach him with façade of lies and at this junction, I pronounce and declared in my Name that, I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas advise President Donald Trump, he is within the Law and Legal Remit, to Shutout Destructive Bureaucrats who are now Political Terroristsfrom Parliament and Senate and or Close Down the Media Houses that have shown a will to set American People ablaze in their Hoax News against a Government whose genuine intention is to Protect the American People.

 

Mr. Trump Is An Icon Of Business Power, The Fierce Man Willed By A Powerful View, The Brand That StylonHis Greatness. Those Who Speak Against Him Are Simply JealousOf Him. — By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas

 

The PerchOf An Eagle Is The Gorgeousness Of Its Wings That Hold The StableOf Its Feet — By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas

 

On this, I Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas askMr. President Trump to immediately Pass a Bill of Immunity to Protect his Reputation. The Media can be Shutout and Shutdown,if their Hell-Raiser Maldemer of Essentricismcontinues.

 

 

PRESIDENT AUTHORITY

 

 

Principle Without Emotion Is Not Cruelty, But The Act To Embrace Emotion Is The Destruction Of Self-Determinism; It’s A Me, Do Or Die Affair.  — By Her Knowledgeable Prof. Alexia Thomas

 

The Hammers of Trump must be Ponderous.

Democrats, I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas say Stop the Mayhem. FBI Stop the Intrusion. No Independent FBI Chief has Power to Investigate Mr. President. This is Evidence American Style of Government is Too many Cook Spoil the Meal, so American Justice is a Political Bill of Maniacs.

 

Investigation against Trump Presidency must be stopped. He has the Power as a President to Close Down the FBI. So, Americans respectively Voted Donald Trump in Power by the Act of Democracy.

The only reason Democrats are questing Trump’sGovernment is because they are equally a Criminal Mastermind themselves, Simply, a Kettle calling a Pot Black.

 

So, I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas say unto President Donald Trump you must now  Exercise and by Mandate of Executive Powers without the Court, because the Court is equally part of the Government and because the Government has willed the interest for Motherland, then the Court must recognize the Government.

 

Mr. Donald Trump has America to Governed. Democracy is not the Best System of Government. So, the Menaces of Media Threat is Destructiveto the Trump Government. So, I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas warn all American Media Houses to withdraw the Narcissism of Ferocious Plot.

 

DEMOCRATS HIDING IN THE VEIL

 

  1. Democratic Party is the Biggest Problem of Americans in their failed ideology to suppress People’s Voice by Witch-hunting Rivals. This is simply Narcissism.

 

  1. Democratic Party has a lot to hide. The Veil in the Brunt to Impeach President Donald Trump is because the Democratic Party in their Malignant Operations has Seized and Frozen a lot of Russian Assets and because President Trump takes a Different View on the past Government’s Abuse on the Russian Government in that Donald Trump will release all Frozen Russian Seized Assets which Democrats Millionaires have kept as their own Asset enriching their Coffers daily in the name of Government.

 

  1. Democrats feared Trump’s Relationship with the Russians, so in that game they have made all façade of unfounded Fallatical Allegationsagainst President Trump.

 

  1. So, Democrats, I Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas advise your Party to Behave Themselves or get Dissolved by the Electorate.

 

  1. American Politics for the First Time will Change to Conventional of Liberal Association with Americans most Hated Countries. Relationship of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin is not a Crime. So, Democrats, stop the Destruction of Trump Presidency.

 

  1. Trump’s Government owns the Play Ground, so Democrats Keep Off or equally Face the Laws and Brunt of Justice. President Trump has been Democratically elected by the American People, so Democrats should mind their business or their Party will face the Haunt of expulsion.

 

  1. President Donald Trump is a Victim of Blackmail, Libel and Defamation of Character, so American Democrats and her Democratic Party be warned. You can fool all, butnot Great Eye, as I, Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas is a Guardian Angel from the Realm of the English Orthodox hence my Silence will bring Jeopardy denying HumanProtection and Values, I so believe must be defended till my death. I will not compromise Truth for Corruption.

 

 

Press Release By Her Knowledgeable Professor Alexia Thomas – Chairman of The Commonwealth Liberation Party and Chieftain of The Commonwealth Treaty Alliance Commission.

 

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Recapitalisation Without Transformation is a Risk Nigeria Cannot Afford

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Recapitalisation Without Transformation is a Risk Nigeria Cannot Afford

BY BLAISE UDUNZE

 

 

In barely two weeks, Nigeria’s banking sector will once again be at a historic turning point. As the deadline for the latest recapitalisation exercise approaches on March 31, 2026, with no fewer than 31 banks having met the new capital rule, leaving out two that are reportedly awaiting verification. As exercise progresses and draws to an end, policymakers are optimistic that stronger banks will anchor financial stability and support the country’s ambition of building a $1 trillion economy.

 

https://www.stanbicibtcbank.com/nigeriabank/personal/products-and-services/all-loans/stanbic-ibtc-mreif-home-loans

 

The reform, driven by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) under Governor Olayemi Cardoso, requires banks to significantly raise their capital thresholds, which are set at N500 billion for international banks, N200 billion for national banks, and N50 billion for regional lenders. According to the apex bank, 33 banks have already tapped the capital market through rights issues and public offerings; collectively, the total verified and approved capital raised by the banks amounts to N4.05 trillion.

 

 

 

No doubt, at first glance, the strategy definitely appears straightforward with the idea that bigger capital means stronger banks, and stronger banks should finance economic growth. But history offers a cautionary reminder that capital alone does not guarantee resilience, as it would be recalled that Nigeria has travelled this road before.

 

 

 

During the 2004-2005 consolidation led by former CBN Governor Charles Soludo, the number of banks in the country shrank dramatically from 89 to 25. The reform created larger institutions that were celebrated as national champions. The truth is that Nigeria has been here before because, despite all said and done, barely five years later, the banking system plunged into crisis, forcing regulatory intervention, bailouts, and the creation of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) to absorb toxic assets.

 

 

 

The lesson from that experience is simple in the sense that recapitalisation without structural reform only postpones deeper problems.

 

 

 

Today, as banks race to meet the new capital thresholds, the real question is not how much capital has been raised but whether the reform will transform the fundamentals of Nigerian banking. The underlying fact is that if the exercise merely inflates balance sheets without addressing deeper vulnerabilities, Nigeria risks repeating a familiar cycle of apparent stability followed by systemic stress, as the resultant effect will be distressed banks less capable of bringing the economy out of the woods.

 

 

 

The real measure of success is far simpler. That is to say, stronger banks must stimulate economic productivity, stabilise the financial system, and expand access to credit for businesses and households. Anything less will amount to a missed opportunity.

 

 

 

One of the most critical issues surrounding the recapitalisation drive is the quality of the capital being raised.

 

 

 

Nigeria’s banking sector has reportedly secured more than N4.5 trillion in new capital commitments across different categories of banks. No doubt, on paper, these numbers may appear impressive. Going by the trends of events in Nigeria’s economy, numbers alone can be deceptive.

 

 

 

Past recapitalisation cycles revealed troubling practices, whereby funds raised through related-party transactions, borrowed money disguised as equity, or complex financial arrangements that recycled risks back into the banking system. If such practices resurface, recapitalisation becomes little more than an accounting exercise.

 

 

 

To avert a repeat of failure, the CBN must therefore ensure that every naira raised represents genuine, loss-absorbing capital. Transparency around capital sources, ownership structures, and funding arrangements must be non-negotiable. Without credible capital, balance sheet strength becomes an illusion that will make every recapitalization exercise futile.

 

 

 

In financial systems, credibility is itself a form of capital. If there is one recurring factor behind banking crises in Nigeria, it is corporate governance failure.

 

Many past collapses were not triggered by global shocks but by insider lending, weak board oversight, excessive executive power, and poor risk culture. Recapitalisation provides regulators with a rare opportunity to reset governance standards across the industry.

 

 

 

Boards must be independent not only in structure but also in substance. Risk committees must be empowered to challenge executive decisions. Insider lending rules must be enforced without compromise because, over the years, they have proven to be an anathema against the stability of the financial sector. The stakes are high.

 

When governance fails, fresh capital can quickly become fresh fuel for old excesses. Without governance reform, recapitalisation risks reinforcing the very weaknesses it seeks to eliminate.

 

 

 

 

 

Another structural vulnerability lies in Nigeria’s increasing amount of non-performing loans (NPLs), which recently caused the CBN to raise concerns, as Nigeria experiences a rise in bad loans threatening banking stability.

 

 

 

Industry data suggests that the banking sector’s NPL ratio has climbed above the prudential benchmark of 5 percent, reaching roughly 7 percent in recent assessments. Many of these troubled loans are concentrated in sectors such as oil and gas, power, and government-linked infrastructure projects, alongside other factors such as FX instability, high interest rates, and the withdrawal of Covid-era forbearance, which threaten bank stability.

 

While regulatory forbearance has helped maintain short-term stability, it has also obscured deeper asset-quality concerns. A credible recapitalisation process must confront this reality directly.

 

 

 

Loan classification standards must reflect economic truth rather than regulatory convenience. Banks should not carry impaired assets indefinitely while presenting healthy balance sheets to investors and depositors.

 

Transparency about asset quality strengthens trust. Concealment destroys it. Few forces have disrupted Nigerian bank balance sheets in recent years as severely as exchange-rate volatility.

 

Many banks still operate with significant foreign exchange mismatches, borrowing short-term in foreign currencies while lending long-term to clients earning revenues in naira. When the naira depreciates sharply, these mismatches can erode capital faster than any credit loss.

 

 

 

Recapitalisation must therefore be accompanied by stricter supervision of foreign exchange exposure, as this part calls for the regulator to heighten its supervision. Banks should be required to disclose currency risks more transparently and undergo rigorous stress testing at intervals that assume adverse currency scenarios rather than best-case outcomes. In a structurally import-dependent economy, ignoring FX risk is no longer an option.

 

 

 

Nigeria’s banking system has long been characterised by excessive concentration in a few sectors and corporate clients, which calls for adequate monitoring and the need to be addressed quickly for the recapitalization drive to yield maximum results.

 

 

 

Growth in most advanced economies comes from the small and medium-sized enterprises that are well-funded. Anything short of this undermines it, since the concentration of huge loans to large oil and gas companies, government-related entities, and major conglomerates absorbs a disproportionate share of bank lending. This has continued to pose a major threat to the system, as the case is with small and medium-sized enterprises, the backbone of job creation, which remain chronically underfinanced. This imbalance weakens the economy.

 

 

 

Recapitalisation should therefore be tied to policies that encourage credit diversification and risk-sharing mechanisms that allow banks to lend more confidently to productive sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing, and technology rather than investing their funds into the government’s securities. Bigger banks that remain narrowly exposed do not strengthen the economy. They amplify its fragilities.

 

 

 

Nigeria’s macroeconomic conditions, which are its broad economic settings, are defined by frequent and sometimes sharp changes or instability rather than stability.

 

Inflation shocks, interest-rate swings, fiscal pressures, and currency adjustments are not rare disruptions; but they have now become a normal part of the economic environment. Despite all these adverse factors, many banks still operate risk models that assume relative stability. Perhaps unbeknownst to the stakeholders, this disconnect is dangerous.

 

 

 

Owing to possible shocks, and when banks increase their capital (recapitalization), it is required that banks adopt more sophisticated risk-management frameworks capable of withstanding severe economic scenarios, with the expectation that stronger banks should also have stronger systems to manage risks and survive economic crises. In Nigeria today, every financial institution’s stress testing must be performed in the face of the economy facing severe shocks like currency depreciation, sovereign debt pressures, and sudden interest-rate spikes.

 

 

 

Risk management should evolve from a compliance obligation into a strategic discipline embedded in every lending decision.

 

Public confidence in the banking system depends heavily on credible financial reporting.

 

Investors, analysts, and depositors need to be able to understand banks’ true financial positions without navigating non-transparent disclosures or creative accounting practices, which means the industry must be liberated to an extent that gives room for access to information.

 

 

 

Recapitalisation provides an opportunity to strengthen the enforcement of international financial reporting standards, enhance audit quality, and require clearer disclosure of capital adequacy, asset quality, and related-party transactions. Transparency should not be feared. It is the foundation of trust.

 

One thing that must be corrected is that while recapitalisation often focuses on financial metrics, the banking sector ultimately runs on human capital.

 

Another fearful aspect of this exercise for the economy is that consolidation and mergers triggered by the reform could lead to workforce disruptions if not carefully managed. Job losses, casualisation, and declining staff morale can weaken institutional culture and productivity. Strong banks are built by strong people.

 

If recapitalisation strengthens balance sheets while destabilising the workforce that powers the system, the reform risks undermining its own economic objectives. Human capital stability must therefore form part of the broader reform strategy.

 

 

 

Doubtless, another emerging shift in Nigeria’s financial landscape is the rise of digital financial platforms that are increasingly changing how people access and use money in Nigeria.

 

Millions of Nigerians are increasingly relying on fintech platforms for payments, microloans, and everyday financial transactions. One of the advantages it offers, is that these services often deliver faster and more user-friendly experiences than traditional banks. While innovation is welcome, it raises important questions about the future structure of financial intermediation.

 

 

 

The point here is that the moment traditional banks retreat from retail banking while fintech platforms dominate customer interactions, systemic liquidity and regulatory oversight could become fragmented.

 

 

 

The CBN must see to it that the recapitalised banks must therefore invest aggressively in digital infrastructure, cybersecurity, and customer experience, while cutting down costs on all less critical areas in the industry.

 

Nigerians should feel the benefits of recapitalisation not only in stronger balance sheets but also in faster apps, reliable payment systems, and responsive customer service.

 

As banks grow larger through recapitalisation and consolidation, a new challenge emerges via systemic concentration.

 

Nigeria’s largest banks already control a significant share of industry assets. Further consolidation could deepen the divide between dominant institutions and smaller players. This creates the risk of “too-big-to-fail” banks whose collapse could threaten the entire financial system.

 

 

 

To address this risk, regulators must strengthen resolution frameworks that allow distressed banks to fail without triggering systemic panic, their collapse does not damage the whole financial system, and do not require taxpayer-funded bailouts to forestall similar mistakes that occurred with the liquidation of Heritage Bank. Market discipline depends on credible failure mechanisms.

 

 

 

It must be understood that Nigeria’s banking recapitalisation is not merely a financial exercise or, better still, increasing banks’ capital. It is a rare opportunity to rebuild trust, strengthen governance, and reposition the financial system as a true engine of economic development.

 

One fact is that if the reform focuses only on capital numbers, the country risks repeating a familiar pattern of churning out impressive balance sheets followed by another cycle of crisis.

 

But the actors in this exercise must ensure that the recapitalisation addresses governance failures, asset quality concerns, risk management weaknesses, and transparency gaps; and the moment this is done, the banking sector could emerge stronger and more resilient.

 

 

 

Nigeria does not simply need bigger banks. It needs better banks, institutions capable of financing innovation, supporting entrepreneurs, and building economic opportunity for millions of citizens.

 

 

 

The true capital of any banking system is not just money. It is trust. And whether this recapitalisation ultimately succeeds will depend on whether Nigerians see that trust reflected not only in financial statements but in the everyday experience of saving, borrowing, and investing in the economy. Only then will bigger banks translate into a stronger nation.

 

 

 

Blaise, a journalist and PR professional, writes from Lagos and can be reached via: [email protected]

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FirstBank Makes Home Ownership Possible for Nigerians with Single-Digit Interest Rate Loan

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FirstBank Makes Home Ownership Possible for Nigerians with Single-Digit Interest Rate Loan

For millions of Nigerians, homeownership has long felt like an ambition deferred. Squeezed by rising property prices, persistent double-digit inflation and high commercial lending rates, the dream of owning a home has remained just that – a dream.

But that narrative is quietly changing. Thanks to FirstBank.

The N1 Trillion Intervention Reshaping Access

In partnership with the Ministry of Finance Incorporated Real Estate Investment Fund (MREIF), FirstBank has unveiled a mortgage opportunity that could redefine access to housing finance in Nigeria.

Backed by the Federal Government’s N1trillion mortgage fund, the initiative is designed to empower Nigerians with affordable, long-term credit to own their homes.

9.75% Interest Rate in a 30% Lending Environment

MREIF is priced at 9.75% per annum, dramatically lower than prevailing commercial loan rates. Eligible Nigerians can access up to N100 million and repay within 20 years. This translates into significantly more manageable monthly repayments and greater long-term financial stability.

Built for Salary Earners, Entrepreneurs and the Diaspora

The MREIF mortgage facility has been structured to be inclusive. It is available to salary account holders, business owners and diaspora customers. Whether you are a young professional aiming to exit the rent cycle, an entrepreneur building generational stability, or you’re a Nigerian abroad looking to secure assets locally, the product opens a pathway that has historically been out of reach for many.

 

Taking the First Step

For those who have been waiting for the right time, this is definitely it. The question is no longer whether homeownership is possible. The real question is: will you act before the window narrows?

Visit https://www.firstbanknigeria.com/personal/loans/mreif-home-loan/ and in no time you could be the latest homeowner in town.

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Alpha Morgan Bank Deepens Presence in Abuja with New Branch in Utako

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Alpha Morgan Bank Deepens Presence in Abuja with New Branch in Utako

 

Marking another milestone in its expansion drive, Alpha Morgan Bank has opened a new branch in Utako, Abuja, reinforcing its strategy of building closer institutional ties within key business communities and bringing its financial expertise closer to individuals, and enterprises driving the city’s growth.

 

 

The new branch, located at Plot 1121 Obafemi Awolowo Way, Utako, Abuja is strategically positioned to serve individuals, entrepreneurs, and corporate clients within Utako and surrounding districts.

 

 

The expansion follows the Bank’s recently concluded Economic Review Webinar held in February 2026, as the bank continues to position as a thought-leader in the financial services industry.

 

 

Speaking on the opening, Ade Buraimo, Managing Director of Alpha Morgan Bank, said the move underscores the Bank’s commitment to accessibility and service excellence.

 

 

“Proximity matters in banking. As communities grow and commercial activity expands, financial institutions also evolve to meet customers where they are. The Utako Branch allows us to deliver our services to people in that community efficiently while maintaining the high standards our customers expect,”

 

 

The Utako location will provide a full suite of retail and corporate banking services, including account opening, deposits, transfers, business banking solutions, and financial advisory support.

 

 

Customers and members of the public are invited to visit the new Utako Branch to experience the Bank’s approach to satisfying banking.

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