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Knowledge Plus Action Produce Practical Success..

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Sir Kuli Kuli

 

 

Sir. Kuli Kuli.

 

-This is special reminder to our youthful peers, it should be read, meditated and be shared by and to everyone related to knowledge, education and those with future plans to succeed in any field. Pay attention please!share this piece please! Discuss about this with someone please!.

 

-The secret behind those people without “certified knowledge” yet they are succeeding while Millions with the certificate continue to suffer with expectations, retirement, direct and indirect disappointments are  ‘application of realistic and practical strategy’. You graduate and rely on your certificate, he didn’t go to school but he focus on tireless search for money, after years of struggle, he is getting better even without the certificate.

 

-Let us simply go straight to the bitter reality. It is a general fact that Millions of “Knowldege based persons” doesn’t focus on “entrepreneurial active engagements” simply because they are convinced to have studied and will get into offices that will give them salaries and allowances, forgetting the following secret:

 

1 ‘An educated person without entrepreneurship is just a scholar’.

2 ‘An entrepreneur without certified education is just a business man’.

3 ‘An educated entrepreneur is an intellectual billionaire’.

4 ‘Education and entrepreneurship are like the engine and a vehicle that one cannot work effectively without the other’.

 

-Alot of people want to succeed and remain successful, but more than majority of them keep depending on and  doing the same mistake and expecting a different result. You can’t beat life if you don’t use multidimensional strategy. You want to succeed but you carry pride, shyness, selective choices and desire to enjoy even before you make it in life.

 

-This is why it is important for an entrepreneur to be educated, acquire knowledge and skills of doing things and it is highly important for an educated person to put in practical use all forms of knowldege and skills acquired to achieve the desired result of success. Our inability to do certain things for survival makes us a threat upon ourselves and our nation because we have become too attached to scarcity, poverty and desperate needs.

Branding All Criminals as “HERDSMEN” Will Attract More Crimes

-The remedy to poverty and financial independence is to invest in yourself. Invest in becoming more knowledgeable and get new skills. Invest in the best education you can get. Invest in both certificates and most importantly in entrepreneurial engagements. When you use the strategy of annexing knowledge with action, ideas with struggle, you are inevitably going to succeed and this is where our people lag behind.

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-Remember, investment for personal development is a catalyst for growth and advancement, both for individuals, governments, private and public organizations, when you acquire knowledge, you enhance yourself as an individual who will then yield productivity and provide  the necessary achievements for personal or collective success.

 

-As individuals, we must stop wasting our time waiting for governments or non governmental organization, let’s think and act. It is a pity if after 21 years of educational attainment (Primary to University) we will sit back and spend years waiting for employment. The system of the education, our Policies, the social institutions and the entire structure of our society should have make it a culture for every youth to get engaged in one practical work or the other.

 

-Nigeria has a vision of becoming one of the top 20 economies in theworld by 2020, as outlined in its “Nigeria Vision 2020” strategy. How can we achieve this vision even in 2050 when more than majority of our educated class are over depended on government and doesn’t prioritize entrepreneurship above certificate?. We are continuously becoming a fragile liability to our country, increasingly growing in youthful population without adding much impact.

 

-The youth that feels more of the unbearable heat of poverty, hardship and lacks should learn to commodify their education, acquire more knowledge of both theory and practicals and engage in doing something productive, because knowledge is an important instrument necessary to unlock the doors of underdevelopment and by practically doing something entrepreneurial; you are holding the most reliable tools for survival.

 

-We must gradually start keeping our ‘certificates mentality’ aside when trying to unlock those doors for survival. Time will come when nobody will care about your certified knowledge but your skills and capacity. Nobody will ever believe certain things happening today if they were told in the year 1999. We just must stop constituting nuisance to the economy of Nigeria.

 

-Invest and struggle as if you have no certificate so that when the opportunity that is fitted to the certificate comes, you will be having a multiple opportunities and chances of permanent success. In this critical end of the 21st century, don’t just think of white collar jobs with certificates, struggle hard to create white collar jobs because time will come when robots and machines will take away all kinds of jobs and employment, don’t be one of the future victims, be one among the ‘independent opportunity builders of tomorrow’.

 

-Our priority should always be investing in knowledge, skills,  learning and using whatever we learn and know into practical activity. Don’t just have knowledge or certificates without using it into reality. The best of knowldegeble people are those that uses what they know to solves human problems or at least solve their personal problems that will in turn reduce the problems of the society.

 

-Utilizing education for development is centered around annexation,  compromise and diffusion of both knowledge, action, certificate, ideas and entrepreneurship together for improved productivity and innovation. We must revisit the reality of our lives, keep aside the lifestyle we borrow and start building what will help us. Remember, the future is so near, act now or suffer forever.

 

-Finally, it is important to always remember this quote by Zaid Ayuba Alhaji ‘True Education shouldn’t be proven by a piece of paper, it should be from the attitude of the educated. Majority of those without various certificates use to be better than those with it, in fact, sometimes degrees and qualifications without the orientation to ‘hustle hard’ confuse millions of those that entered classrooms to be redundant, over dependent, destitute, unproductive, unconscious, mentally enslaved and good for nothing degree holders after graduation,  because the system of education and the knowledge acquired are not giving them the right orientation, time, space opportunities and direction to do what they should do according to situations’.

 

This is just my opinion…

 

Sir. Kuli Kuli.

ND-PAD, PDDPIT, PDDPGD, HPDDPIT, B.Sc International Relations.

Twitter:@SirKuliKuliZaid Email:Comradezaid6@gmail.com

Opinion

INEC, David Mark, And Coming Abachaian Coronation

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By Farooq Kperogi

With INEC’s overtly partisan, intentionally illegal, and possibly remote-controlled withdrawal of recognition for the David Mark-led ADC, Nigeria has officially reverted to full-on Abacha-era suffocation of even the wispiest pretence to competitive electoral politics.

Lawyers have said that the judgment of the appeal court, which INEC invoked as a convenient crutch to carry out a predetermined action, said the status quo should be maintained. In other words, the judgment says David Mark should remain the chairman of the ADC until the merit of the appeal has been determined.

However, it appears that INEC is in the know of what the final judgment will be and decided to jump the gun. Yet the INEC chairman is a professor of law and a SAN! He can’t even pretend to be neutral.

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It seems obvious that the ADC faction INEC will ultimately recognize, as I predicted in my column of two weeks ago, will be the faction that will merely be an extension of the APC, much like the PDP now is. They will either present dummy candidates or adopt Tinubu as their candidate, which is a distinction without a difference.

It is obvious that Tinubu wants a coronation, not a competitive election, in 2027. He is scared to death about a real electoral contest. We all know why.

Well, according to public records, it cost around ₦300–₦355 billion to conduct the 2023 presidential election. It is projected that it will cost almost ₦870 billion to conduct the 2027 election.

Why should Nigeria spend close to a trillion naira on a preset, make-believe, Abachaian coronation exercise? Let’s kuku cancel democracy and make Tinubu the supreme leader. At least we would save a trillion naira.

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Opinion

El-Rufai/Uba Sani And Pantami’s Perceived Peace Of The Graveyard

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By Bala Ibrahim.

Yesterday was Sunday, a day recognized as the first day of the week, which in the Bible, holds supreme significance as the day of Jesus Christ’s resurrection. Some Christians call it the Lord’s Day. There are many interpretations given to show the significance of Sunday. But for the purpose of this article, attention would be given to the significance of yesterday’s Sunday, (29/03/2026), with special bias to the role it played in promoting reconciliation between parties and friends, as well as how, at the National Mosque, Abuja, the wall of religious divide was unconsciously demolished, as followers of different faiths scrambled over each other, in the competition for space to participate in the funeral rites of late Hajiya Umma El-Rufai, the deceased mother of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai.

By the Islamic tradition, when a Muslim dies, before he or she is taken to the grave yard, special prayers are offered on the deceased person’s body, at any convenient place, before proceeding to the cemetery. For late Hajiya Umma El-Rufai, the National Mosque Abuja, was the venue. And what happened there, is the prelude to this article.

If I say everyone that is anything in Nigeria was there, I think I am making an understatement. But that is not surprising, given the personal and political profile of the bereaved, who is Mallam Nasir El-Rufai. It may interest the reader to know that, among the early callers at the Mosque, were reputable Christians, with people like Peter Obi and Rotimi Amaechi, rubbing shoulders with Muslims, in the stampede to partake in the Islamic ceremonial practice. They know they don’t belong to the Islamic faith, but they want to share with Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, as an honour of solidarity, in the last rites given to his beloved mother. The duo of NSA Mallam Nuhu Ribadu and Governor Uba Sani were there face to face with El-Rufai. The atmosphere was solemn, sombre and clearly sorrowful.

Also present at the Mosque was Prof. Isa Ali Ibrahim Pantami, former Minister and renowned Islamic cleric, who seized the opportunity to advance the imperative of reconciliation in Islam. He started in the Mosque and continued at the graveyard, to the extent of persuading El-Rufai to shake hands with Uba Sani, with a soft but casual commitment from both sides, on the pleaded forgiveness. It was difficult, very difficult, especially when perused through the prism of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai’s position.

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Undoubtedly peace is fundamental to Islam, because it serves as a source of inner tranquillity and social harmony. The Quran has laid emphasis on reconciliation and kindness. So every Muslim is enjoined to embrace reconciliation. However, in advancing the course of reconciliation, timing is important, I think. We must not only perceive peace as merely the absence of conflict. No, it also has something to do with our state of mind. A man standing before the lifeless body of his beloved mother, at the graveyard, under intense pressure, is not in the appropriate state of mind to commit to any peace deal. Unless we are referring to the probabial peace of the graveyard.

The ambition of any reconciliation is to arrive at unity. And unity can only come after conflict, if there is healing. By definition, healing is the process of becoming healthy or whole again, encompassing the restoration of physical tissue, mental, or emotional well-being. A man under emotional pressure is not fit for commitment to any peace deal, I think. Unless we are referring to the probabial peace of the graveyard.

Peace of the graveyard is not genuine, because it could be deceptive, by resulting in forced calm, beneath which lies a deep tension. As a friend of the trio of El-Rufai, Nuhu Ribadu and Uba Sani, Sheik Pantami must go for a genuine, organic and sustainable peace agreement between the parties. More so, because they were genuine friends before.

All hands must be put on deck, to compel President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to come into the agreement. Because, he was the one who compelled Mallam Nasir El-Rufai to come into the Tinubu project in 2023. Indeed a lot of water had passed under the bridge. We should forget past misunderstandings or issues that are now irrelevant, and forgivable. Let’s move on from past disagreements and let go of grudges.That’s the only way to arrive at genuine reconciliation.

It may be recalled that the Muslim Rights Concern, MURIC, had long been appealing to the President, to come out clearly and reciprocate the gesture given to him in his time of need by Mallam Nasir El-Rufai. MURIC said they were the ones who persuaded El-Rufai to support Tinubu in 2023, as a result of which, he confronted the so called Buhari cabal, the then CBN Governor and other forces that were putting spanners in the work of the Tinubu project. The result of which is now President Tinubu. MURIC said El-Rufai does not deserve to be humiliated and went further to support their argument with the quote below:

“Noteworthy is a video clip showing how President Tinubu openly asked El-Rufai to join his government and this did not happen at a private meeting. It happened at a campaign ground, in the presence of thousands of party enthusiasts.”

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Opinion

Defection: Kwankwaso’s Legacy Under Scrutiny; A Critical Look at his Political Journey Since 1999

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Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso

 

When Nigeria returned to democratic rule in 1999, the people of Kano embraced the moment with hope and expectation after years of military governance. Among the prominent figures who emerged at the time was Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, whose leadership inspired confidence among many citizens eager for progress and representation.

More than two decades later, however, Kwankwaso’s political legacy continues to generate debate, with supporters highlighting his achievements and critics questioning the long-term impact of his leadership on Kano’s development.

Kwankwaso’s first tenure as governor (1999–2003) was marked by visible infrastructure projects, including roads and public buildings, which were widely welcomed by residents. At a time when tangible government presence was limited, these developments symbolised a new beginning. Yet, some analysts argue that while these projects addressed immediate needs, they did not sufficiently tackle deeper structural challenges, particularly the decline of Kano’s once-thriving industrial economy.

Historically a major commercial hub, Kano’s economy had been weakening due to years of policy neglect and infrastructural decay. Critics maintain that a more comprehensive economic strategy might have helped revive industries and reduce dependence on federal allocations.

Kwankwaso’s defeat in 2003 by Malam Ibrahim Shekarau marked a turning point. Observers note that while the loss strengthened his political network and grassroots appeal, it also raised questions about the sustainability of the systems established during his administration. Many of the projects, though impactful, were seen as lacking the institutional depth needed for long-term continuity.

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Returning to office in 2011, Kwankwaso expanded his development agenda with increased infrastructure and an ambitious foreign scholarship programme that benefited thousands of Kano youths. The initiative is widely regarded as one of his most significant contributions, opening educational opportunities for many.

However, critics argue that despite these efforts, broader economic transformation remained limited. Rising population growth, unemployment, and declining industrial capacity continued to challenge the state’s development trajectory.

Beyond governance, Kwankwaso’s political influence has also shaped Kano’s power dynamics. His role in building a strong political movement—popularly known as the Kwankwasiyya—has been praised for mobilising grassroots support but criticised by some for reinforcing a personality-driven political structure.

Political analysts further point to the tensions surrounding the Kano Emirate as a significant episode in the state’s recent history. The controversial removal of Muhammadu Sanusi II highlighted deep divisions within the state’s political and traditional institutions, with varying opinions on the factors that led to the crisis.

In recent years, Kwankwaso’s shifting political alliances—from the PDP to the APC and later to the NNPP—have also drawn mixed reactions. While such moves are common in Nigeria’s political landscape, critics argue that they have contributed to instability and uncertainty within Kano’s political structure.

The 2023 elections brought another dimension to the discourse, with the emergence of Abba Kabir Yusuf as governor under the NNPP platform. Subsequent political developments, including evolving relationships between state and federal actors, have further shaped public debate about governance priorities and political strategy.

Today, Kwankwaso remains one of Kano’s most influential political figures, with a legacy that reflects both notable achievements and enduring controversies. While many credit him with expanding access to education and improving infrastructure, others believe that the state’s long-term economic and institutional challenges require deeper reflection.

As Kano continues to navigate its future, the assessment of past leadership—including Kwankwaso’s role—remains central to ongoing conversations about development, governance, and political direction.

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