Monday, 8 June 2026

🚨 NIGERIA IS BLEEDING!

NSCDC Mining Marshals Commander Accuses Police FID of Plotting to Eliminate Him Over Crackdown on Illegal Chinese Miners!

If you want to know why Nigeria is stuck in a cycle of poverty despite being sitting on trillions of dollars in mineral wealth, LOOK NO FURTHER.

The absolute rot, institutional betrayal, and shameless corruption in our security agencies have just been blown wide open, and it will make your blood boil.

In a shocking, high-stakes showdown that reads like a political thriller, the Commander of the elite NSCDC Mining Marshals, Attah John Onoja, has thrown down a massive gauntlet. He has officially petitioned Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Olatunji Rilwan Disu, accusing a rogue unit within the Nigeria Police Force Intelligence Department (FID) — specifically "Team N" led by CSP Abdulmajeed Abisoye Oyewumi — of launching a malicious campaign to cripple his unit, arrest his management team, and cover up for foreign illegal miners!

This is not a joke. This is our national commonwealth being stolen while security agencies are allegedly fighting a proxy war on behalf of cartels.

The Allegation: Sponsoring Police to Attack Nigerian Officers?

According to explosive reports, Commander Onoja didn’t mince words. He openly alleged that foreign nationals (specifically Chinese miners) whose massive illegal operations were shut down in Nasarawa State are actively bankrolling police elements to destroy the Mining Marshals!  

"We have it on good authority that the Chinese men whose illegal mining site was shut down in Nasarawa State are the ones bankrolling CSP Abdulmajeed Abisoye Oyewumi for this blackmail," Onoja revealed. "The real players in the background... are the foreign nationals that are united as common enemies against the Mining Marshals." 

Think about that for a second. While young, patriotic Nigerians are putting their lives on the line to protect our lithium, gold, and solid minerals, foreign syndicates are allegedly using our own police force to hunt them down.

The "₦2 Billion" Smear Campaign Exposed

The clash reached a boiling point after the tragic death of a Mining Marshal operative, Guard Commander Agada Levi, who was killed in the line of duty.  

Instead of helping find the real killers, the Police FID allegedly hijacked the tragedy. A viral report suddenly surfaced claiming the police arrested three NSCDC officers and traced over ₦2 Billion to a suspect's bank account.

But Commander Onoja just pulled the receipts and completely humiliated the narrative.

Onoja released the actual Zenith Bank statement of the accused officer, Jibrin Labaran. The total amount in the account? Less than ₦1 million (₦760,457.25 to be exact)—which is just his official salary!  

The police allegedly fabricated a ₦2 billion lie out of thin air just to brand the anti-illegal mining unit as corrupt, turn the public against them, and justify arresting their top leadership.

Armed Clashes: Police vs. Civil Defence

This isn't just a war of words; it has been physical and violent:

April 2025: FID police operatives allegedly clashed violently with Mining Marshals at a site in Nasarawa.  

February 2026: Another violent confrontation broke out between the two agencies in Ondo State.  

The Ultimate Disgrace: Commander Onoja revealed that police officers actually accompanied Chinese miners to a residential estate to try and arrest the Mining Marshals' lead prosecution lawyer! It took local soldiers standing guard at the estate to block the police and their foreign handlers from abducting the lawyer. 

While bandits, terrorists, and kidnappers are making life a living hell for Nigerians, a heavily armed police unit is allegedly spending its time escorting illegal foreign miners to harass Nigerian government lawyers. Let that sink in.

TIME TO SOUND OFF: LET THE RAGE LOOSE IN THE COMMENTS! 

This is a national embarrassment of the highest order. Our resources are being pillaged, and our institutions are fighting each other for the crumbs dropped by foreign cartels.

We want to hear from you. Do not hold back:

How does it make you feel to see the Nigeria Police Force being accused of acting as a "security guard" and hit-squad for illegal Chinese miners against fellow Nigerian officers?

Where is the President? If President Tinubu’s "Renewed Hope" agenda is real, why are rogue elements allowed to sabotage the Ministry of Solid Minerals like this?

What should be the punishment for any security official found guilty of selling out Nigeria’s economic survival to foreign looters?

This topic affects your future, your economy, and your country. Drop your comments below and share this everywhere until the authorities act!

Friday, 5 June 2026

The Governor Who Told The President: "You Are Not Welcome Here."

Nigeria's Second Republic.

1980.

President Shehu Shagari — leader of the most powerful civilian government Nigeria had seen boarded his presidential jet and flew to Bendel State on an official visit.

He landed at Benin Airport.

And found — nothing.

The Governor had declared a public holiday and asked everybody to stay indoors. Shagari arrived to an empty airport and empty streets — and asked rhetorically: "Where are my people?"  

His people were not there.

Because the Governor of Bendel State had sent them home.

That governor was Professor Ambrose Folorunso Alli.

And this is his story.

Who Was Ambrose Alli?

Born September 22, 1929 in Idoani, Ondo State. A Nigerian medical professor. The first civilian Executive Governor of Bendel State — now divided into Edo and Delta States.

He was not a career politician.

He was a professor of morbid anatomy.

A head of department at the University of Benin.

A man who believed that education could transform a people.

He was also a member of the constituent assembly that drafted the 1978 Nigerian Constitution.  

When he ran for governor in 1979 on the platform of Awolowo's Unity Party of Nigeria, he made promises most Nigerian politicians would never dare to make.

He promised citizens free education at all levels, free medical services, full employment and rural development.  

And then — remarkably he tried to keep them.

What He Built

After he was sworn in as governor, Alli declared education free for primary and secondary schools in Bendel State. Children received free books, biros, mathematical sets and special pencils. At every independence celebration and children's day, every child in Bendel State had a free meal of rice and stew with meat. 

He established over 600 new secondary schools and abolished secondary school fees. 

He established colleges of education in Ekiadolor, Agbor, Warri and Ozoro. Three polytechnics. Four teachers training colleges. And abolished charges for services and drugs at state-owned hospitals.  

And at the crown of it all, Bendel State University, Ekpoma.

Founded in 1981.

Later renamed, Ambrose Alli University — in his honour.

A governor who wore sandals to work because he was too busy governing to shop for shoes.

History recorded that detail.

It tells you everything about the man.

But There Was A Problem.

To build all of this — Alli needed money.

And the money was being held by the federal government.

Governor, Alli challenged President Shagari's federal government to declare openly the revenue generated in the Federation Account and how it was being shared. He took the federal government to court on the matter.

This was radical. Dangerous. Unprecedented.

An opposition governor, from an oil-producing state dragging the president to the Supreme Court over money that belonged to his people.

And one of the most remarkable things that happened was that the Governor of Rivers State, Melford Okilo, who belonged to Shagari's own ruling NPN party — joined Alli's case against his own president.  

Because when it came to Niger Delta oil money, party loyalty had its limits.

And Then Came The Presidential Visit.

Alli announced publicly that the President was not welcome in Bendel State. The police barricaded the airport doors preventing crowds from reaching the presidential jet.  

The Governor declared a public holiday. Asked everyone to stay indoors. Shagari arrived to empty streets and an empty airport and asked: "Where are my people?" 

In the end after the initial standoff — Shagari calmly sat in dignity, smiling and waving to his supporters. He proceeded to Government House where Governor Alli was waiting to receive him. 

Two powerful men.

One federal government.

One state government.

One explosive meeting.

The End And The Injustice That Followed

On December 31, 1983 — the military ended Nigeria's Second Republic.

Alli was arrested.

He was sentenced to 100 years in prison by a military tribunal for allegedly misappropriating ₦983,000 meant for a road project. 

The man who built 600 schools.

Who fed every child on independence day.

Who took the president to court for his people's money.

Sentenced to 100 years.

He was eventually released. But the damage was done.

Professor Ambrose Folorunso Alli died on September 22, 1989, his own 60th birthday at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital.  

He died on the same day he was born.

As if life itself chose the date.

Decades after his death, he was granted a presidential pardon.

His family rejected it.

"He was never guilty of anything," his son Andrew said.

"Other than giving his all to improve the lot of the people."

Professor Ambrose Folorunso Alli.

September 22, 1929 — September 22, 1989.

He told a sitting president he was not welcome.

He built 600 schools.

He fed children on independence day.

He wore sandals to Government House.

He died on his birthday.

And Nigeria sentenced him to 100 years for it.

This is the Nigeria Untold story.

The men who gave everything and got injustice in return.

Have you heard of Professor Ambrose Alli before today? What does his story tell us about Nigeria's treatment of its best leaders? Drop your thoughts below. 

Share this because His name deserves to be in every Nigerian history book.

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