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Buhari should give no more interviews-Farooq A. Kperogi

One of the self-care treats I’ve chosen to indulge in, for my own sanity, is never to torment myself by watching a Muhammadu Buhari interview on television, but a good-natured yet “troublesome” friend of mine for whom I have profound respect never ceases to mischievously tyrannize me by forcing me to watch Buhari’s interviews obviously because he knows that seeing Buhari’s trademark parapraxises and unfailingly disastrous rhetorical incompetence would extract a response from me.

It was the friend who first sent me a link to the interview Buhari granted to Channels Television’s Maupe Ogun-Yusuf and Seun Okinbaloye on Thursday. After enduring 40-plus minutes of merciless self-torture to watch Buhari’s hollow, sadly familiar, and well-rehearsed ramblings, I came away with the same impressions I’ve always had of him. I’ll taxonomize these impressions into three broad categories.

One, Buhari has a fixed, limited, predictable, and stereotyped repertoire of responses to every question or concern about Nigeria that he never transcends. For example, every response to questions about his regime is abidingly prefaced with remarks about how the APC in 2015 ran on a campaign to stamp out insecurity, revamp the economy, and fight corruption. It’s a refrain he must repeat in every damn interview, and it’s immaterial if it’s relevant to the question he was asked.

When he is questioned about the endemic insecurity in the country and the deepening oceans of blood that drench the land, like clockwork, he never fails to talk about how some local governments in Borno and Yobe used to be under the control of Boko Haram in 2015 and how his regime has liberated these local governments. He has said this in every public statement or interview since 2015. This is, of course, not true.

Even the Shehu of Borno told Buhari on November30, 2018, that “the people of Borno State are still under Boko Haram siege,” that “Nobody can dare move out of Maiduguri by 10 kilometres without being confronted/attacked by Boko Haram,” and that “Quite a number of farmers are being killed and kidnapped on a daily basis.”

Boko Haram factions tax citizens in rural Borno and Yobe (a clear indication of their control of the states), and way more soldiers have been murdered by Boko Haram in the time Buhari has been in power than at any time in peacetime Nigeria.

When any question borders on rural and urban banditry in which Fulani outlaws are the perpetrators, his predictably safe, standard, prepackaged response is to regurgitate the nonsense about colonial cattle routes and grazing grounds.

Questions on the economy? Well, he has a ready-made story about how, when he came to power, petroleum production declined, the price of crude oil dwindled, and how “militants” from the Niger Delta were “unleashed” on his regime. PREMIUM TIMES and Dubawa fact-checked his story about oil production and crude oil prices, which the fact-check showed he has repeated several times in the past, and determined that it is entirely false.

How about questions on unemployment—or anything that requires the government to live up to its own side of the social contract by being responsible and nurturant? His formulaic response is, “Go back to the land,” as if we’re currently underwater creatures trapped in the seas or particles suspended in space. He’s started spouting this exact phrase since August 2015, a few months after he was sworn in as president.

During a meeting with Dr Kanayo Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on August 7, 2015, Vanguard reported Buhari as saying, “It’s time to go back to the land. We must face the reality that the petroleum we had depended on for so long will no longer suffice. We campaigned heavily on agriculture, and we are ready to assist as many want to go into agricultural ventures.”

In other words, Buhari is a scripted, robotic, unimaginative talking mannequin who has no capacity to veer off from the limited pool of stereotyped responses to questions he has memorized about seven years ago. That is why every interview he has granted is characterized by mind-numbingly mechanical sameness.

The second broad category of my impressions of Buhari’s interviews is that his dementia, about which I sincerely feel sorry for him, comes through when he is confronted with questions that are unrehearsed, that require him to think on the spot, and that invite a demonstration of intimate familiarity with recent events.

One of the symptoms of early-stage dementia, which I suspect Buhari suffers, is trouble with short-term memory. Whenever any interaction requires him to use the resources of his old memories, he is often fine and can come across as composed and clear-thinking. Problems arise when he is faced with recent events, particularly when he is unscripted.

Unlike the softball questions he was asked during the recent Arise TV PR show dignified as a journalistic interview, Channels TV’s reporters went beyond the questions they were required to send to Buhari in advance and asked probing follow-up questions—like all good journalists should. And this was where Buhari’s cognitive and intellectual infirmities were laid bare.

Whenever Buhari is asked a question that requires an answer outside his narrow, well-rehearsed mental collection of ready-made responses that draw from his old memories, he instinctively picks any arbitrary response that comes to his mind, which is often at variance with the question he’s asked.

That was why when Channel TV’s Ogun-Yusuf challenged him to justify his opposition to direct primaries when he is himself a direct beneficiary of the process, he looked like a deer in headlights and said he expected to be asked “how did we overthrow the PDP.” And then he went off on a tangent about the 2015 election, which had no connection with the question he was asked but which allowed him the latitude to relapse to his comfort zone: reliving and regurgitating old memories while evading new ones.

A question about his appointment of Dr. Doyin Salami as his economic adviser and the specific role Salami will play in his new appointment was largely elided and instead yielded an incoherent waffling about agriculture, about how only 2.5 percent of Nigeria’s arable land is being cultivated, about border closures, rise in rice production in Nigeria, etc.

When Okinbaloye asked him about Nigeria’s rising debt profile, the progressive fall in the value of the naira, and the skyrocketing inflation in the country using the official statistical figures of the government he putatively heads, he was thrown off.

Then he deployed his time-tested strategy: he dug deep into old memories and invoked a ready-made response that had not the remotest relationship with the question asked. “Well, I am not sure how correct your calculations are, but all I know is that we have to allow people to get access to the farm,” he said. “We just have to go back to the land. What we have done so far, we have achieved some successes and people ought to measure our successes viz-a-viz the problems when we started.”

Buhari is clearly the victim of recognizably diminished sentience and cognitive presence, and everyone around him knows it. Everyone in the upper reaches of governance in Nigeria knows it. Even directors of the Nigerian Intelligence Agency (NIA) politely admitted in a secret memo to Buhari, which Peoples Gazette of December 23, 2021, uncovered, that Buhari’s aides make him sign documents he doesn’t understand.

“As the head of this massive entity call Nigeria, sometimes your, aides, advisers and handlers, may, out of selfishness and vested personal interest, deliberately mislead you, to unwittingly do some things against your known principles, unfortunately, because, they know that sometimes, due to some urgent numerous state matters that need your urgent attention, you may not necessarily be too meticulous about everything,” the Gazette quoted the directors to have said in the memo.

Nonetheless, dementia doesn’t explain everything. Buhari has always been an intellectually incurious person. He doesn’t read, is mentally indolent, and is averse to learning. People who don’t exert their brains are often apt to develop cognitive impairments earlier than those who do.

Olusegun Obasanjo is almost 90 years old (if you recall that Wole Soyinka, who is 87, once said he used to call Obasanjo “egbon,” i.e., the term of respect for an older person in Yoruba, when they were growing up in Abeokuta), but he is still as mentally alert as a 25-year-old because he constantly rejuvenates his brain by reading, learning, and writing.

Because of Buhari’s ingrained intellectually and cognitively indolent habits, his brain has no space for the storage and retrieval of new information unaided. That’s why he is such a disaster.

The final category of Buhari’s interviews center on his inveterate contempt for the poor even though his own parents were poor, too. He is also compulsively sadistic. That’s why he thinks the only fate recent graduates (who are not his children or relatives, of course) deserve is farming, not government jobs, cars, and fancy housing.

Buhari has always been like that. His nickname as a youngster in Daura was “Danliti mugu,” meaning “Danliti the sadist.” In Hausaland, people habitually say, “Da sauran aiki; Buhari yaga mai rake da iPhone.” Literally: “There’s still more to be done; Buhari saw a sugarcane hawker with an iPhone!” In other words, the appearance of even a glimmer of prosperity in people activates Buhari’s sadistic instincts. He betrays this every time he talks.

Buhari should give no more interviews. We’ve already had enough.

13 Strong Quotes From Soludo People Manifesto- GGM

 

1. ”As the Chairman of Anambra Vision 2070,I have thought through our challenges and the disruptive changes needed to secure the future and I will vigorously implement the foundational phase of vision 2070”

2. ”If you employ me as your Chief Servant , I will devote every minute of my time to work with and mobilize all critical stakeholders to make Ndi Anambra proud and I will hit the ground running from Day one being 17th March , 2022”.

3. ”It is time to decongest the heavy concentration in Abuja and encourage most people who have something to offer Nigeria to go to drive development from the bottom”

4. ” Our manifesto derives from a firm belief that despite the defects of the current federal system , there is sufficient room to manoeuvre and fully exploit synergies and complementarities with the FGN, DFIs and others to build a liveable and prosperous State”

5. ” Our primary target is sustainable and inclusive wealth creation with jobs , jobs and jobs. We target at least 130,000 private sector jobs per annum for our youths and 1000 youth millionaires per annum in the medium term”

6.” We envision Anambra as an industrial-technology hub to lead Africa’s export market ”

7. ” We plan to position Anambra as a centre of excellence for human capital development and proactively our students/youths as Africa’s digital tribe , actively ensure planned cities , communities, and markets and a more sustainable , clean, green and liveable environment and a mainstreaming of the core Igbo values of integrity, hard work, competition, compassion and morality”.

8. We envision a public service that truly delivers timely and efficient service to the citizens and a State with guaranteed rule of law and property rights such that commercial disputes are settled within 30 days”

9. ” We envision Anambra whereby our homeland population will have no incentive to migrate to other places in search of opportunities”

10.” Every Kobo of Anambra’s money will be devoted to working for Ndi Anambra. I sincerely believe in integrity and due process meaning that I will always allow the machinery of Government to follow due process”

11. I believe in equity and fairness and will consequently maintain a policy of fair distribution of resources, appointments and amenities across the State and interest groups. Meritocracy will have pride of place and those who demonstrate that they can add value to Ndi Anambra will be given the opportunity to serve”

12. ” We will hold periodic Town Hall meetings with critical stakeholders and there will be the citizens’ hotlines( phone numbers,e-mail addresses and Facebook account) to interact with me”

13 ” We will collaborate with other states in South East and south south to deepen regional integration for economies of scale and shared prosperity”

Edited by Ndubuisi Anaenugwu of Good Governance Ministry(GGM)

What Soludo’s governorship means to Southeast- Chioke

On November 6, 2021, the people of Anambra State set high standards for their neighbours in the Southeast and beyond when they voted Chukwuma Soludo, a professor of economics, former Central Bank of Nigeria governor and one of Africa’s leading critical thinkers, into office as their governor. The whole country had waited with bated breath during the campaign. The question on everyone’s mind was, would merit finally overwhelm mediocrity in Nigeria’s politics?

Soludo’s landslide victory has raised hopes of a better day for Nigeria, but more so for the Southeast which has been afflicted by a crippling vacuum in political leadership for decades. Indeed, since the demise of the great Owelle of Onitsha, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, and Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Southeast Nigeria has grappled with the weight of uninspiring political leadership, which lacks the strength of character to awaken the people. The cost of this prolonged leadership vacuum has been high in economics and blood.

It is understandable that Soludo’s victory should raise hopes… hope that tenacity would always pay off; hope that the Nigerian society has the capacity to redeem itself and hope that given the right conditions, the best amongst us may get a chance to lead us. A sense of justice pervades Soludo’s emergence. In 2010, he had lost his first stab at becoming a governor to Peter Obi. Unfazed by that experience, Soludo had re-launched his bid for the office of governor in 2013 but was disqualified by the APGA screening committee. He did not allow the experience to shake his loyalty to the party. And on March 31, 2021, he survived the greatest obstacle to his dream of becoming governor when he escaped unhurt from a violent attack by gunmen who disrupted his engagement with the youth of his Isuofia hometown. A faint-hearted candidate would have ended the journey that day but Soludo trudged on. The underlying lesson here is that if the force of our dream is not strong enough to survive the fire of adversity, we fall by the wayside.

Soludo is not alone. Igboland has a long line of bright minds that had shown a great deal of interest in providing political leadership to the people. Before Soludo’s success, Prof Barth Nnaji had made a silent bid to lead Enugu State but was discouraged by the blood and gore that marked the politics of the state at the time. Nnaji is extraordinary. He is cited as the first black man in American history to become a distinguished professor of Engineering; the first African to become director of the United States National Science Foundation; and the first Nigerian to win the Baker Distinguished Research Award, which is widely considered as the Nobel Prize for Industrial Engineering. Beyond all these, Nnaji is renowned for his expertise in artificial intelligence and robotics. Nnaji shied away from Enugu politics and never looked back. What a loss!

Yet, it is one loss that has worsened the pathetic state of political leadership in the region. In the absence of candidates with outstanding profiles, the Southeast has suffered in the hands of career politicians and professional power mongers who have no imagination to engage the future. At a time when the region needs first-class thinkers to wipe out the consequences of the indifference of the Federal Government to its plight, successive governors in the Southeast have shown a regrettably poor grasp of nuance and utter lack of imagination to chart a new path. They have largely resorted to playing the victim where they should have played the revolutionary, and opted for self-serving stratagems where conscionable populism would have served a greater purpose. Since everyone is aware of a deliberate attempt by the federal government to deny the Southeast of its fair share of investments, the challenge is for the leadership to wend its way around the neglect to negotiate new frontiers of excellence. At the moment, only Willie Obiano of Anambra State and Dave Umahi of Ebonyi State have demonstrated that with a wise and competent management of resources, the Southeast can erase her infrastructural deficits. Unfortunately, Obiano and Umahi are oases in a desert of crippling incompetence.

Regrettably, the lack of inspirational leaders has laid the region bare for hotheads and anarchists to rob our people of peaceful sleep. The growing insecurity in the Southeast has crippled economies and wrenched food off dining tables. The results were telling this Christmas. Igboland was a shadow of itself.

The footprints into the Southeast had decreased. Most village squares were empty. The streets lacked vigour. The unknown gunmen have driven the final nail into the economic coffin of the Southeast under the watch of our political leaders!

Soludo’s emergence is therefore the proverbial trumpet call. Igboland has lived in denial enough. Our destiny is in our own hands. We are the change we seek. The time of pointing fingers at imaginary enemies is over. We must accept responsibility for our current situation and think our way out of it. We must roll up our sleeves to enthrone a new order of reality.

The All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) offers us a creative window to change the game. APGA’s manifesto insists that the party must “attract the best and brightest into our politics and public service by aggressive recruitment of private sector people, academics and professionals within Nigeria and in the diaspora through internships, fellowships, executive appointments and special nominations to contest elective offices.” Here is a party that has resolved to give a chance to Nigeria’s best and brightest. Here is a party that has chosen to cast its net beyond the career politicians. Governor Obiano came to office as a technocrat. Prof Soludo will take over as an academic and high-flying public intellectual with an impressive record of service. That is inspiring!

Word on the street is that Soludo is the trigger that will ignite a revolution in Southeast politics and the search for regenerated leadership. It is hoped that the former CBN governor is fully aware that as the next leader of APGA, he has a historic obligation to finally build the party into a formidable political movement. The current political temperature of the region is amenable to change. A reinvigorated and refocused APGA is a major component of that change. This is the unconsidered meaning of Soludo’s emergence as governor-elect of Anambra State.

Chioke, an investment banker, writes from Lagos.

Source : The Nation

Dowen Students and Staff Cleared from Sylvester’s Death

The Lagos State Government has exonerated the five students and staff of Dowen College, Lagos, arrested in connection with the death of 12-year-old Sylvester Oromoni.

They were all cleared, including the school, following the legal advice of the Director of Public Prosecution, DPP, Ms. Adetutu Oshinusi addressed to the Deputy Commissioner of Police, State Criminal Investigation Department, SCID and the trial magistrate, Magistrate Olatunbosun Adeola.

In the legal advice, it was reported that the cause of his death was “Septicaemia, Lobar Pneumonia with Acute Pyelonephritis, Pyomyositis of the right ankle and Acute Bacteria Pneumonia due to severe Sepsis.”

They added that the toxicology report of Sylvester’s post mortem samples did not show any toxic or poisonous substance in his body, as claimed by his family.

The DPP’s legal advice, therefore, concluded that based on these findings, there is no case of murder, involuntary manslaughter and or malicious administering of poison with intent to harm against the five students, Favour Benjamin aged 16, Micheal Kashamu (15), Edward Begue (16), Ansel Temile (14) and Kenneth Inyang (15).

The students were also cleared of claims of belonging to a cult due to insufficient facts to establish the offence.

“From available facts in the duplicate case file, the investigation carried out by the Police did not reveal that any secret society name, tattoo or insignia of any unlawful society was found in the possession of any of the suspects during the investigation carried out by the Police.

To hold otherwise would amount to sniffing for an offence and a speculative act which is not permitted in law. It is trite law that suspicion no matter how grave cannot be a ground for conviction.” the legal advice read in part.

The school and its five employees: Celina Uduak, Valentine Igboekweze, Hammed Ayomo Bariyu, Adesanya Olusesan Olusegun and one Adeyemi, were also cleared of all charges and directions have been given for all the suspects to be released from custody.

Meanwhile, the school is still closed.

I was Accused of Supplying Arms to Bandits – Uche Nwosu

Former Chief of Staff  to Imo State  Government  and son -in-law to former Governor Rochas Okorocha, Mr Uche Nwosu said yesterday that he was accused of supplying arms to militants.This allegation was contained  a petition  made to the police  by  yet-to-identified individual.

Nwosu made this known  in Owerri, while narrating the  experience of  his  arrest by security operatives at St Peter’s Anglican Church Eziama-Obiere, in Nkwerre Local Government Area of Imo State  during the outing service of his late mother, Jemimah Nwosu, last Sunday.

He  explained that he was taken to the Police Tactical Squad office in Abuja, where he was told by the police that  “Someone wrote a petition against me (Nwosu), that I was supplying arms to militants and giving them money.”

He added that there was no time that the police officially invited him to come and answer questions from the petition against him.

He  therefore  demanded from the Inspector General of Police, IGP,  Usman Alkali Baba  to investigate the owner of the private jet which was used to fly him  from Enugu to Abuja.

Nwosu spoke as the former  governor of the state and his father-in-law Rochas Okorocha expressed  shock over Nwosu’s experience in the hands of his abductors.

This is even as the  Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, yesterday, described as a sacrilege, the  alleged abduction  from  a Church  service, condemning the  act in  its  entirety.

IPOB said  the  abduction  has exposed the masterminds of insecurity in Imo State, adding that it is a vindication that  IPOB and Eastern Security Network, ESN, are not  responsible  for the numerous attacks, abductions/kidnappings in  the state  contrary to alleged false accusations and propaganda by the  state  government against the pro Biafra group.

Narrating his ordeal, Nwosu said: “The petition the  Police  said was from somebody  stated that their reason  for arresting me  was  that I was  supplying arms to militants and giving them money. The whole plan was cooked up in Imo State Govt House. The security men attached to the Government House, one Shaba was behind this plot.

“The  plot was to  humiliate  me and malign my image. No security man from  Abuja or the state command came for that operation. Those  security  officers were all security men attached to the government of Imo State.

A  normal policeman cannot behave the way they did. They came and shot inside the church which no professional police officer would do. They shot anyhow. They are a killer squad from the Government House.

“Nobody invited me or called me on phone. I would have answered but I did not receive any invitation from the police. So, just like that, they came, arrested  me and handled me like a criminal and treated me like I have committed an  offence.

“I want the Inspector General of Police, IGP, to investigate the person who ordered for my  arrest and the owner of the private jet and who paid for the private jet that took me from Enugu   to Abuja. They took me to the tactical squad office and the IG sent somebody to come  and interview  me and I gave  my statement. From what I gathered,  the IG was not properly briefed on what was going on.”

However, the Imo State Government through the Imo State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Declan Emelumba, has maintained  that  the  government has no hand in the  events that led to the arrest of Nwosu and that  it was purely the  activities of the security operatives, adding that they should wait for the outcome of the investigation of the police.

(Vanguard)

 

SCO to Abacha Hamza, Reveals those Behind Insecurity in Nigeria

Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, one time Chief Security Officer ( CSO) to former Nigerian military ruler, General Sani Abacha, has alleged that rich people with access to weapons and hard drugs were behind the insecurity bedevilling Nigeria.

Al-Mustapha said dealing with the situation would require the contribution of all and sundry that are patriotic about the country, while the authorities would have to step on toes in the effort to normalise the security situation.

Major Al-Mustapha who spoke in a viral VOA Hausa interview, said ” it is high time that every patriotic Nigerian, anyone who has Nigeria, Africa or the entire world at heart, everyone should stand up and make a personal contribution. Things are not moving as expected.

There are people spending their money to cause crisis and it appears they are succeeding.

From the way, they’ve access to weapons today in Africa, and different kinds of drugs, and from the kind of people that are given such things and they are using it, these have shown that the strength they have has started to overpower the laws of African countries, especially here in Nigeria.

That is why in my remarks, I delved on these issues and other issues pertaining to world affairs.

He said many bad things are happening in the country as some few individuals were so powerful to have acquired the means of exploring, refining and exporting the nation’s mineral resources.

He alleged that these few Nigerians benefitting from the country’s mineral resources seemed to be unstoppable.

(Journalist101)

Breaking: Uche Nwosu Arrested not Kidnapped- Police

Special Force Unit from the office of the Inspector General of Police arrested Uche Nwosu, the son-in-law of a former governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha, The PUNCH has learnt.

Nwosu was arrested on Sunday at St Peter’s Anglican church at Eziama Obieri in the Nkwerre Local Government Area of the state while he and his family members were on an outing service after the burial of their mother, Jemimah Nwosu.

A police source told The PUNCH that it was police officers from Abuja who arrested him.

The source allayed fears that Nwosu was kidnapped, saying, the “police arrested him”.

“Police from the IGP’s Special Force Unit arrested him. He was not kidnapped,” the source, who pleaded anonymity, said.

Also, the Imo State Police Command Public Relations Officer, Michael Abattam, confirmed that Nwosu was in custody in a press statement titled, “Arrest of Chief Uche Nwosu’.

The statement read, “This is to inform the general public that chief Uche Nwosu was not kidnapped but was arrested by the police and Imo state police command is aware of the arrest and presently he is in police custody.

This is to refute the earlier news that has been making rounds on social media that he was kidnapped by unknown persons/gunmen.

(punch)

 

 

Funding Soludo Peoples’ Manifesto To Achieve Miracle Of Our Time

It has been my position that building a modern city is not a rocket science . It takes a visionary and revolutionary Leader to build a 21st century State . Dubai did not fall from the moon . Even Rwanda in Africa is setting a new standard for Africa just because of one man’s ideas ! Idea rules the world . Prof Chukwuma Soludo is a great thinker and reformer. His revolutionary ideas can disrupt our age-long consumption driven system to productive and industrialized system. We are too religious in this part of the world that planning is exchanged with miracle. Soludo wonders will come as a miracle of the century. GGM will partner with Soludo ideas to achieve the desired results for our people as two can always walk together if there is an understanding.

Prof Soludo has announced that he will set up a financial system that will be most transparent as well as accessible. A sound financial management attracts international financial agencies and with good developmental plan, local and international investors will see Anambra state under Prof Soludo as investment destination .

This is Prof Soludo response when asked where he would find money to fund his dream smart city – ”Funding the audacious agenda of this government, can be very challenging, especially in these economic times. Here is where my core competence as a development/monetary/macro Economist and a Central banker, will be critical. I will leverage my professional experience and my extensive national and international networks and contacts in the development community to ensure that we mobilize the required funding.The plan has been fully ‘costed’. It will be funded through a mix of direct state government funding, private sector investments and concessions, project financing, PPP, grants from DFIs, counterpart funding from FGN and DFIs, and exploiting innovative financing mechanisms offered by the FGN such as the Infrastructure Tax Credit scheme, infrastructure fund, etc.Maximizing Anambra’s access to the various FGN’s investments under the concurrent list, will provide supplementary investment financing.With sound credit rating for the State government, there will be easier access to the capital market. Our government will only borrow for bankable projects that will pay back and contribute to the state’s economic transformation” End of the quote.

Good Governance Ministry is the first political Ministry in Nigeria working hard to awaken the silent majority on the urgent need to participate in the electoral process in order to chose credible and visionary political leaders that would transform our society.

Ndubuisi Anaenugwu is an economist and Deputy Leader of Good Governance Ministry

Breaking: Veteran Nollywood Sam Obiago is Dead

Nigeria entertainment industry has been hit by death again as another Nollywood actor, filmmaker and the chairman of Screen Writers Guild of Nigeria (SWGN), Sam Obiago has passed on.

The sad news of his demise was disclosed by some of his colleagues who took to social media to express their shock.

According to one of the colleagues, “He has been ill for a while now. So yesterday he started feeling very illl and he was rushed to the hospital at midnight. He gave up in the early hours of today.”

Also confirming the sad news, Nollywood actress, Destiny Etiko took to her Instagram page to share a photo of the Nollywood star alongside a caption that depicts sorrow and mourning.

Sam Obiago is a Nigerian born Nollywood actor, film maker, TV personality and movie producer who has featured in over 100 movies.

(Journalist101)

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