@edits_sefa1: Hayatın arka planı#mamiemen #sadrepost #dans #sefakındır

Edits_Sefa_Kındır
Edits_Sefa_Kındır
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Monday 08 June 2026 15:54:53 GMT
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hazallyxx
ₐllah :
en sad repostlar bende:D
2026-06-11 17:06:48
0
omerrktl_37
Ömer3737 :
Basur napıyo
2026-06-09 17:57:29
24
messidetanirlarrrr
MESSİ 🕊️🕊️CAN🕊️🕊️ :
alttaki video reklam
2026-06-11 18:21:52
3
elifsudekizilay
𝓮𝓼 :
Arda turan futbolcu değilmiydi
2026-06-10 18:20:02
8
zeusfarkedenekada
Zeusfarkedenekadar :
Son video bakar mısınız rica edersem
2026-06-11 20:49:51
1
metehandikmen
metehan🀄️ :
Keşke bunuda repostlasam 😞
2026-06-11 13:41:37
3
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🚨🚨 Must watch Your bank did not pay dividends last year. You checked your investment. Nothing came. You asked questions. Nobody gave you a straight answer. ​Here is the straight answer. Five of Nigeria's biggest banks—the ones where your salary lands, where your savings sit—collectively had to absorb over ₦2 trillion in bad loan provisions and impairments recently. UBA took a ₦331 billion hit. Access Bank's impairment charges jumped 209 percent. First Bank absorbed ₦748 billion in losses. ​The Central Bank of Nigeria's stance is clear: no healthy dividends until your balance sheets are sorted. Your returns? Frozen or slashed. ​And while a crashing Naira plays a huge part, a massive chunk of this systemic stress comes from a handful of elite mega-debtors. ​One of the biggest names the banks are chasing? Dr. Ernest Nnaemeka Azudialu-Obiejesi. He is the founder of Nestoil—Nigeria's biggest indigenous oil pipeline company. He holds a national honour. He sits on the board of Julius Berger. He is celebrated at every table that matters. ​And a consortium of lenders, led by FBNQuest Merchant Bank and First Trustees, claims his companies owe the banking system over $1.1 billion and ₦430 billion linked to major oil assets. ​When the banks finally moved—using court orders to send a receiver-manager and police to the gates of Nestoil Tower—the billionaires fought back all the way to the Supreme Court. ​On June 1, 2026, the Supreme Court ruled. Nestoil celebrated a massive victory because the court unfroze their assets and scolded the lower courts for jumping the gun. But the banks fired back, reminding the public that the war isn't over: the court did not wipe away the debt; it just sent the battle back to the High Court. ​We broke down exactly what the court said. Word for word. No spin. ​This 8-part documentary covers the debt, the oil deals, the court strategies, and the banking regulations that affect your money. Because this is about a system where elite corporate battles directly impact ordinary Nigerians queuing at ATMs. ​Watch it. Share it. This is your money. This is your story. . . .  #onetruthhub #KnowTheTruth #questionauthority #Nestoil #NigeriaAccountability
🚨🚨 Must watch Your bank did not pay dividends last year. You checked your investment. Nothing came. You asked questions. Nobody gave you a straight answer. ​Here is the straight answer. Five of Nigeria's biggest banks—the ones where your salary lands, where your savings sit—collectively had to absorb over ₦2 trillion in bad loan provisions and impairments recently. UBA took a ₦331 billion hit. Access Bank's impairment charges jumped 209 percent. First Bank absorbed ₦748 billion in losses. ​The Central Bank of Nigeria's stance is clear: no healthy dividends until your balance sheets are sorted. Your returns? Frozen or slashed. ​And while a crashing Naira plays a huge part, a massive chunk of this systemic stress comes from a handful of elite mega-debtors. ​One of the biggest names the banks are chasing? Dr. Ernest Nnaemeka Azudialu-Obiejesi. He is the founder of Nestoil—Nigeria's biggest indigenous oil pipeline company. He holds a national honour. He sits on the board of Julius Berger. He is celebrated at every table that matters. ​And a consortium of lenders, led by FBNQuest Merchant Bank and First Trustees, claims his companies owe the banking system over $1.1 billion and ₦430 billion linked to major oil assets. ​When the banks finally moved—using court orders to send a receiver-manager and police to the gates of Nestoil Tower—the billionaires fought back all the way to the Supreme Court. ​On June 1, 2026, the Supreme Court ruled. Nestoil celebrated a massive victory because the court unfroze their assets and scolded the lower courts for jumping the gun. But the banks fired back, reminding the public that the war isn't over: the court did not wipe away the debt; it just sent the battle back to the High Court. ​We broke down exactly what the court said. Word for word. No spin. ​This 8-part documentary covers the debt, the oil deals, the court strategies, and the banking regulations that affect your money. Because this is about a system where elite corporate battles directly impact ordinary Nigerians queuing at ATMs. ​Watch it. Share it. This is your money. This is your story. . . . #onetruthhub #KnowTheTruth #questionauthority #Nestoil #NigeriaAccountability

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