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Leaked Audio: Lawyer Incites People Against AAS CEO, Jesame Micheal Alleges threat to life (videos)

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Leaked Audio: Lawyer Incites People Against AAS CEO, Jesame Micheal Alleges threat to life (videos)

Leaked Audio: Lawyer Incites People Against AAS CEO, Jesame Micheal Alleges threat to life (videos)

 

 

 

A Lagos lawyer, Barrister Ajose who was handling Abayomi Segun olusesan during his issue with the leading online financial platform known as Afriq Arbitrage System is embroiled in a leaked audio where he was alleged to be inciting members against the CEO, Jesame Micheal.

 

 

Leaked Audio: Lawyer Incites People Against AAS CEO, Jesame Micheal Alleges threat to life (videos)

 

 

 

 

In the audio, Barrister Ajose invited the delegates to his office where he allegedly fabricated so many unfounded stories against Jesame Micheal and incited the members to team up against him. Close aides to Jesame Micheal revealed it a worrisome development as it poses on threat to life.

 

 

Checks revealed that the reason for his incitement is not unconnected to the fact that Abayomi left him out of his legal settlement move with AAS and the CEO. According to our source, AAjose was cut off the settlement plan when it was allegedly obvious he was only interested in financial inducement and not a solution to the imbroglio. Thus, he was cut off and another solicitor was engaged by Abayomi to handle the out-of-court settlement with AAS and Jesame Micheal. Consequently, Abayomi handed over all the properties and documents with him via affidavit and agreement of transfer to AAS and Jesame Micheal.

 

 

This move by Abayomi’s new lawyer to stand by the truth owing to Abayomi’s open confession allegedly irked Barrister Ajose. Thus, he made frantic move to instigate members to go after Jesame Michel. Sadly, he was caught on tape.

 

 

 

 

It would be recalled that the doggedness of Jesame Micheal to prove critics wrong that AAS was not a scam has paid off as Abayomi has officially admitted to the crime and settled for an out-of-court bargain. Abayomi through his lawyer has signed the put of court settlement by releasing all properties he purchased with the proceeds of AAS money to the organization.

 

 

 

It would be recalled that Abayomi Segun Oluwasesan, who was employed by his boss on the 15th of June, 2022 to work as a web developer, literally tempered with the platform at a time when his boss, Jesam Micheal went for a liver transplant and entrusted the codes to him.

 

 

 

 

Overwhelmed by greed, Abayomi who was entrusted with the sensitive data for the smooth operations of the company, engaged the services of his cohorts, disrupting the smooth operations of the platform and stealing hard-earned investors’ money running into several billions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Checks revealed that AAS is a global phenomenon with over 500,000 investors from over 132 countries. Thinking his employer, Jesam Micheal would not survive the operation, he withdrew several millions of dollars and became an instant rich dude with an astonishing flamboyant lifestyle overnight. His first criminal act was obtaining a Ghania passport which he used in acquiring other international residences and properties. He became the owner of a car dealership known as FIDORAY Autos and imported over 30 exotic wonders on wheels. He acquired Tanzanian and Dubai citizenship. Aside from that, he bought state-of-the-art properties in the UK, Dubai, Tanzania, and Nigeria.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One of the plazas he acquired in Lagos was to the tune of N450m, landed properties around Dangote refineries to the tune of N1b, and splashed a billion naira on the interior decoration of the Mesh 3-star hotel in Mainland, Lagos State.

A nobody Abayomi was travelling across the globe with investors’ money on first-class tickets. His dubious activities literally crashed the lucrative platform on the 15th of May, 2023.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amidst the misconceptions, Jesame Micheal while addressing journalists cleared the air on the issues. He denied the fact that the block chain was hacked.

 

 

“There are a few things I need to clear. There are rumours and false information out there that the AAS blockchain was hacked. That’s not true. You can’t hack a blockchain. He came up with the lie and I told him it’s not possible because you can’t hack a blockchain system. He only had access to it because the code was given to him. So he had permission, my face ID, thumbprint, and other details I gave to him because I was so sick to the point of death and my survival was 50/50. So it’s a lie by him that the AAS blockchain was hacked. That was the initial lie he came up with until I confronted him with the truth and when confronted by Interpol he confessed.. Out of his wickedness, He tempered with the boot. Remember we have three components that contain AAS. He only tempered with the boot and can’t access the blockchain.

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Union Bank Rewards Customers with Motorcycles, Cash Prizes in 3rd Save and Win Palli Promo 4 Monthly Draw

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Union Bank Rewards Customers with Motorcycles, Cash Prizes in 3rd Save and Win Palli Promo 4 Monthly Draw

Lagos, Nigeria— Union Bank of Nigeria has rewarded another set of customers in the ongoing Save and Win Palli Promo 4 campaign. Six lucky customers each won a brand-new motorcycle, and 120 additional winners won cash prizes.
The third monthly hybrid live draws were transparently conducted at the Bank’s Sabo, Yaba Branch in Lagos under the supervision of relevant regulatory institutions. For integrity purposes, some of the winners were contacted to congratulate and remind them that the Bank will never call to request or confirm their confidential banking details such as BVN, date of birth, pins, or passwords.

 

Save & Win Palli Promo 4 is a nationwide campaign designed to reward both new and existing customers with cash prizes and other exciting gifts worth N131,000,000. This initiative aims to support them in achieving their savings goals while getting rewarded at the same time.

 

To stand a chance to win, customers can continue to top up their savings in multiples of N10,000 or more and perform a minimum of five transactions a month to increase their chances of winning in the draws. This promo is open to new and existing savings and current account holders.

Prospective customers can download the UnionMobile app on their smartphones to open accounts or walk into any Union Bank branch. Returning customers can call the 24-hour Contact Centre on 07007007000 or visit any Union Bank branch nationwide to reactivate dormant accounts.

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Tinubu’s Economic Agenda in Crisis: North-South Divide Strikes Again

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Tinubu’s Economic Agenda in Crisis: North-South Divide Strikes Again

By George Omagbemi Sylvester

 

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, elected in 2023 on the wings of political calculation and elite manipulation, has now found himself caught in the snare of Nigeria’s enduring historical curse: the north-south divide. His ambitious economic reform agenda, intended to liberalize the economy, remove structural inefficiencies, and reduce government expenditure—has hit a legislative wall. But this isn’t just about policy. This is about power, patronage, and the ancient scars of a fractured federation.

The rejection of critical aspects of Tinubu’s economic proposals by lawmakers is a stinging rebuke, not only to his administration but to the very idea that Nigeria can be reformed from the top down without confronting its structural imbalances. In many ways, Tinubu’s presidency is now facing the same nightmare that has haunted every Nigerian leader since independence: how do you govern a country that was never truly united?

The Crumbling Reform Agenda
At the center of the storm is Tinubu’s proposal to centralize and streamline federal subsidies and remove what he termed “wasteful duplication of agencies.” This was meant to continue the subsidy removal narrative started in June 2023, and reduce fiscal leakage. However, the backlash, particularly from legislators representing the northern states, was swift and coordinated.

The northern bloc, comprising lawmakers from Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, and Borno, objected on the grounds that Tinubu’s proposals disproportionately affect their regions, where federal allocation remains a critical lifeline in the absence of strong internally generated revenue. But critics argue this is a strategic form of sabotage, aimed at retaining an unsustainable status quo that prioritizes political patronage over national progress.

Tinubu’s Economic Agenda in Crisis: North-South Divide Strikes Again
By George Omagbemi Sylvester

As Prof. Wale Adebanwi of Oxford University has argued, “Nigeria’s northern elite have historically benefited from the spoils of a rentier state, with oil wealth redistributed without the burden of productive contribution. Any move to reverse this equation is seen as existential.”

Tinubu, a southerner from Lagos, with strong Christian support from the Southwest and Southeast, is now facing the very brick wall that has impeded reforms since the First Republic. His own political survival now depends on how much compromise he’s willing to make—or whether he can break the mold entirely.

A Century-Old Fracture
The rejection of Tinubu’s reforms by northern lawmakers is not new. It is deeply rooted in a century-old tension embedded in the structure of the Nigerian state. The 1914 amalgamation, engineered by British colonialists, fused two vastly different regions, the industrializing, Western-educated Christian south and the feudal, Islamic north, into one artificial political entity.

From independence in 1960, this contradiction has remained unresolved. “Nigeria was created not to function as a cohesive nation, but as an economic convenience for its colonial masters,” noted historian Max Siollun. “What we’re seeing is the consequence of a nation built on convenience rather than consensus.”

The economic priorities of the north and south remain deeply divergent. While the south boasts ports, oil revenue, industries, and a growing tech sector, the north has remained largely agrarian, dependent on federal allocations and political appointments. Any attempt to tamper with this redistribution—whether via subsidy removal or cuts in federal spending, provokes immediate resistance.

Reform vs. Redistribution
Tinubu’s administration promised reforms: subsidy removal, tax reform, and investment in critical infrastructure. But all reforms require sacrifices, and those sacrifices must be nationally distributed to succeed. What Tinubu is discovering, painfully, is that reforms without inclusive buy-in are dead on arrival.

Economist Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili captured the challenge succinctly: “Nigeria’s political economy is structured around the sharing of oil rents, not the creation of wealth. Any attempt to disrupt this structure will provoke fierce opposition from those who depend on the current dysfunction for survival.”

Indeed, the loudest resistance to Tinubu’s reforms has come not from the opposition PDP or Labour Party, but from within his own APC, particularly from northern senators and representatives who feel alienated by the president’s southern-centric economic vision.

The Ghost of Buhari
Many Nigerians are now drawing comparisons between Tinubu’s presidency and that of his predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari, a northern Muslim who governed with overwhelming support from the north. Buhari’s policies favored heavy spending, a bloated civil service, and minimal economic restructuring, a model that created illusions of stability while deepening the economic rot.

“Buhari governed like a tribal chief, rewarding loyalty over competence, and expanding a culture of dependency,” said Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank. “Tinubu’s efforts to break away from that legacy will require courage, strategy, and above all, an appeal to national interest.”

But appealing to national interest in Nigeria is easier said than done. The political class thrives on division. The north fears marginalization, the south resents over-centralization, and the middle belt remains trapped in identity crises. Tinubu, in failing to build a coalition around his reforms, is now paying the price of elite disunity.

The Danger of Ethno-Political Paralysis
The rejection of Tinubu’s agenda is not just a political problem, it is an economic time bomb. Nigeria is drowning in debt, with over 90% of its revenue now going to debt servicing. Inflation is running rampant, the naira has crashed, and unemployment remains alarmingly high. The country cannot afford to maintain the current level of government spending without reform.

But if every economic policy must first pass the tribal test, then reform is doomed. “A nation that filters every economic decision through the lens of ethnicity is a nation marching toward collapse,” warned Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka. “If Nigeria cannot rise above its primordial divisions, it cannot survive the 21st century.”

What Next for Tinubu?
Tinubu’s next steps are critical. Will he revise his reforms to appease northern lawmakers and keep the political peace? Or will he double down, use executive power, and mobilize the Nigerian people behind a populist push for structural change?

There is a middle path, dialogue, renegotiation of the federal structure, and regional empowerment. Many have called for fiscal federalism, where regions generate and control their own revenues, sending only a fraction to the center. This model, already practiced in countries like Canada and the United States, could reduce the perennial tension around federal allocation.

Political economist Ayo Teriba suggests, “Nigeria must move away from revenue-sharing to revenue-generation. That shift requires not just policy but a new national consensus, and that is where Tinubu must lead.”

In conclusion: Lead or Collapse
President Tinubu is at a crossroads. He can continue playing the dangerous game of balancing regional interests with national imperatives, or he can rise above the tribal chessboard and lead with boldness. The north-south divide is not just a historical relic, it is a living cancer that must be addressed through structural reform, not rhetorical appeasement.

The economic reform agenda is not a southern agenda. It is a Nigerian necessity. If lawmakers continue to sabotage reform because it threatens their regional comfort zones, then the entire nation will suffer. As the saying goes, “A house divided against itself cannot stand.”

In the end, Tinubu must decide: will he be a president of compromise, or a reformer of consequence?

Tinubu’s Economic Agenda in Crisis: North-South Divide Strikes Again
By George Omagbemi Sylvester

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Adron Homes Celebrate Easter, Offers Up to 30% Discount and Flexible Payment Plan

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Adron Homes Celebrate Easter, Offers Up to 30% Discount and Flexible Payment Plan

Adron Homes and Properties, Nigeria’s foremost real estate company, joins Christians nationwide and beyond in celebrating Jesus Christ’s resurrection this Easter season.

Easter, a time of reflection, sacrifice, and joyful renewal, reminds us of the triumph of life over death, hope over despair, and love over fear. It is a season that inspires faith, unity, and the promise of new beginnings for individuals, families, and communities alike.

In a statement released by the company, Adron Homes expressed heartfelt appreciation to its Christian clients and stakeholders for their continued trust and loyalty.

“Easter is a season that embodies the spirit of renewal and grace. At Adron Homes, we are inspired by the hope it brings and the values it represents. We remain committed to building not just houses, but vibrant communities where families can thrive, grow, and create lasting memories,” the company stated.

As part of the celebration, Adron Homes announced that its Easter Delight Promo is still ongoing. The promo offers up to 30% discount on all properties nationwide, along with a flexible payment plan of up to 24 months, making homeownership more accessible and convenient than ever.

Even more exciting, subscribers during the Easter promo stand a chance to win fantastic gifts, including bags of rice, whole chickens, rechargeable fans, gas burners, smart TVs, and many more household essentials — adding extra joy to the season of giving.

With estates strategically located in Lekki-Epe, Badagry, Shimawa, Ibadan, Abeokuta, Ede (Osun), Osunjele, Ilisan, Jos, Sagamu, Ado-Ekiti, Atan-Ota, Ikorodu, Papalanto, Ijebu-Ode, Abuja, Nasarawa, Niger, and more, Adron Homes continue to bridge the housing gap by offering luxurious yet affordable properties in fast-growing areas across the country.

Through its unwavering commitment to excellence, Adron Homes ensures every Nigerian has access to premium real estate and the opportunity to achieve their dream of homeownership.

As Christians mark this sacred occasion with loved ones, Adron Homes wishes every Nigerian peace, joy, and the grace of new beginnings.

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