Former lawmaker representing Ekiti Central Senatorial District, Babafemi Ojudu, has narrated his experience in prison under the military regime of the late General Sani Abacha. ...READ THE FULL STORY FROM SOURCE ...READ THE FULL STORY FROM SOURCE
Ojudu revealed that he had to drink his urine to survive in prison and that he had gonorrhea as he was left to die without medication.Read Here First |V!RAL V!D£O OF PAST0R DAUGHT£R M!STAK£NLY S£ND H£R NVD£ V!D£0 M£ANT F0R H£R BOYFR!END T0 CHURCH WHATSAPP CH0!R GR0UP|.
The former Presidential Adviser on Political Affairs during Muhammadu Buhari’s administration made this known in Ado-Ekiti during a media interaction with journalists about his new documentary book titled ‘Adventures of a Guerrilla Journalist’.
Ojudu, who is also a journalist, detailed his struggles for the success and sustainability of democracy under the military regime in his book.
He disclosed that he was arrested 15 times between 1993 and 1997 while working as an investigative reporter.
“There was a time I drank my urine when I was dying. I had gonorrhea and no medication was given to me. I read a book about someone who says urine cures illnesses, and maybe because I had faith in it, I could not feel the illness again the following day after drinking it,” he said.
Ojudu dedicated his book to well-meaning Nigerians “who valiantly fought and discharged their duties with conscientious diligence during the prolonged military rule in Nigeria.”
He pointed out that the highest obligation of any journalist to his country was to write and report the truth without any bias or consideration for external factors.
He stated, “The real solutions to our myriads of problems are far from what are being suggested. For instance, constitutional review being suggested is not one of such solutions to Nigeria’s problem, it is simply all about us.
“In the course of performing your duties as a good journalist, tendencies are that you will be waylaid, harassed, intimidated, threatened and so on, and even excommunicated to exile, like I experienced many times. But those were not enough to draw me back; I remained resolute. Without a vibrant press, it will be difficult for a nation to get things right.
“Do not be dissuaded because that was never me. I saw death face to face, but all that did not discourage me from fogging ahead in performing my avowed duties to the nation.”Read Here First |V!RAL V!D£O OF PAST0R DAUGHT£R M!STAK£NLY S£ND H£R NVD£ V!D£0 M£ANT F0R H£R BOYFR!END T0 CHURCH WHATSAPP CH0!R GR0UP|.
Ojudu urged Nigerians to get a copy of his book, which will be officially unveiled on December 18, 2024, in bookstores in Lagos, Ibadan and Ekiti……READ THE FULL STORY FROM SOURCE