BuhariMustGo: Three Fighters, Three Battles, One Monster | GOVERNMEND

Anyone who has risen to fight against Buhari in a way or more is a hero!
Before we start differentiating and categorising, we must accept the obvious fact that this trio (Sowore, Igboho and Kanu) stood out to beat the drum of resistance for General Muhammadu Buhari over his failure to perform and be at least mistakenly responsible for once. The activities of Nnamdi Kanu and Sowore kept the lousy regime of Buhari on its toes since its inception, long before Sunday Igboho joined in field to further expose a stratum of this government mammoth failure for an administration. Only Buhari is known to have the conscience to whip a child and asks him not to cry. Hence, resistance has become a prescribed medications from the pharmacy of political consciousness for Buhari’s recklessness and incompetence at all time.
While Sowore Omoyele is pro-Nigeria, he doesn’t want Nigeria to break but he’s bent on breaking the spin of oppression. You may hate him, but you can’t shy away from the fact that the activities of Omoyele has helped in safeguarding our civil space and keeping the youth woke. Because there’s a Buhari (tyrant) there must be a Sowore (iconoclast)
Nnamdi Kanu is a secessionist. He has a good reason to hate one Nigeria that has done enough marginalising his people. After the civil war that killed no fewer than a million Igbo, from 1970 till 2021, no Nigerian president has apologised and assured the Igbo people of an inclusive government. If Nnamdi is asking for Biafra, don’t detest him because you enjoy the heterogeneous Nigeria. One good thing about Kanu’s activities is that, he has been able to make it clear to the government that it’s either you listen to the needs of the Igbos or you let them go. As there’s marginalisation, there must be an Nnamdi (secessionist)
The man the media has described as the man of the moment, even though history failed to teach many to understand that, Sunday Adeyemo has been fighting against injustice since the days of Ife/Modakeke crisis. His approach may not be conventional, but he always has a way (that’s working for him) to drive down his message. At the time he rose to deal with criminalities perpetrated by some criminal elements among the Fulani herdsmen, did government wake to its responsibilities or not?
Why Nigeria may never have a Mandela is because of its overwhelming diversities. But who told you Nigeria can’t have tens of Mandelas?
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