Difference between revisions of "David Hundeyin"

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'''David Hundeyin''' is a [[Nigeria]]n journalist, activist, and author. He founded the ''West Africa Weekly'', a [[Substack]] newsletter.<ref>''[https://www.naijanews.com/2023/04/18/twitter-locks-david-hundeyins-account-over-tinubus-dual-citizenship-allegation/ "Twitter Locks David Hundeyin’s Account Over Tinubu’s Dual Citizenship Allegation"]''</ref>
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'''David Hundeyin''' is a [[Nigeria]]n journalist, activist, and author. He founded the ''[[West Africa Weekly]]'', a [[Substack]] newsletter in 2021.<ref>''[https://www.naijanews.com/2023/04/18/twitter-locks-david-hundeyins-account-over-tinubus-dual-citizenship-allegation/ "Twitter Locks David Hundeyin’s Account Over Tinubu’s Dual Citizenship Allegation"]''</ref>
  
 
==Early life==
 
==Early life==
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He also wrote an investigative report about the potential [[human rights]] violations coming out of a proposed infectious diseases bill in [[Nigeria]]'s house of representative addressing the [[Covid-19/lockdown]]. This article won Hundeyin a "People Journalism Prize for Africa".
 
He also wrote an investigative report about the potential [[human rights]] violations coming out of a proposed infectious diseases bill in [[Nigeria]]'s house of representative addressing the [[Covid-19/lockdown]]. This article won Hundeyin a "People Journalism Prize for Africa".
  
In 2021, Hundeyin wrote about the rape and death of a 26-year-old woman. The article and several Tweets by Hundeyin alleged that the suspect used a hotel owned by the wife of Nigerian politician Godswill Akpabio. Akpabio demanded a retraction from Hundeyin because he believed the publication gave the impression that the couple was complicit in the crime and threatened a lawsuit.
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In 2021, Hundeyin wrote about the rape and death of a 26-year-old woman. The article and several Tweets by [[Hundeyin]] alleged that the suspect used a hotel owned by the wife of Nigerian politician Godswill Akpabio. Akpabio demanded a retraction from [[Hundeyin]] because he believed the publication gave the impression that the couple was complicit in the crime and threatened a lawsuit.
  
 
==West Africa Weekly==
 
==West Africa Weekly==
David Hundeyin received a grant from "Substack Local" to start the newsletter, [[West Africa Weekly]], on its platform in 2021. He attributed this publishing change to the creative and editorial freedom it afforded him. He accused [[Globacom]], a telecom company, of throttling access to the ''NewswireNGR'' site after his report came out and said that the website would always get cyberattacks after he writes a story. His newsletter would be delivered to his subscribers directly through email instead.
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David Hundeyin received a grant from "Substack Local" to start the newsletter, ''[[West Africa Weekly]]'', on its platform in 2021. He attributed this publishing change to the creative and editorial freedom it afforded him. He accused [[Globacom]], a telecom company, of throttling access to the ''NewswireNGR'' site after his report came out and said that the website would always get cyberattacks after he writes a story. His newsletter would be delivered to his subscribers directly through email instead.
  
In 2022, Hundeyin published investigative articles on Nigerian presidential candidate [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bola_Tinubu Bola Tinubu,] tech start-up "Flutterwave", and the [[BBC]]’s [[West Africa]] operations. The reports initiated intense [[social media]] conversations between Hundeyin and the subjects of his articles or their supporters. Hundeyin is a supporter of [[Peter Obi]], who ran against [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bola_Tinubu Bola Tinubu] in the 2023 presidential race.
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In 2022, [[Hundeyin]] published investigative articles on Nigerian presidential candidate [[Bola Tinubu]], tech start-up "Flutterwave", and the [[BBC]]’s [[West Africa]] operations. The reports initiated intense [[social media]] conversations between Hundeyin and the subjects of his articles or their supporters. Hundeyin is a supporter of [[Peter Obi]], who ran against [[Tinubu]] in the 2023 presidential race.
  
In April 2023, Hundeyin published Nigeria president-elect [[Bola Tinubu|Tinubu]]'s Guinean passport on [[Twitter]] which questioned his eligibility to become president. [https://twitter.com/DavidHundeyin Hundeyin's Twitter account] was locked for violating [[Twitter]]'s policy on personal identifying information.
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In April 2023, Hundeyin published Nigeria president-elect [[Bola Tinubu]]'s [[Guinean]] passport on [[Twitter]] which questioned his eligibility to become president. [https://twitter.com/DavidHundeyin Hundeyin's Twitter account] was locked for violating [[Twitter]]'s policy on personal identifying information.
  
 
==James Currey Fellowship controversy==
 
==James Currey Fellowship controversy==
In 2022, Hundeyin was announced as The Distinguished James Currey Fellow for 2023 as an academic visitor to the Centre of African Studies at the The [[University of Cambridge]] after signing a publishing deal with the founder of the program, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Onyeka Nwelue.] In March 2023, Hundeyin was dismissed from Cambridge after an investigation into his conduct with [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue] during his book launch at Oxford University. While [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue] was accused of misrepresenting himself as an Oxford University professor even though he was an unpaid Academic Visitor, Hundeyin was accused by attendees of the event of making misogynistic and sexist comments. On [[Twitter]], he presented his fellowship as being awarded by Cambridge University even though he was just an academic visitor under [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue's] now discredited fellowship scheme. Hundeyin later accused Oxford professor Miles Larmer and Kaduna state Governor Nasir el-Rufai, an advisor to Oxford's African Studies Centre, of being behind the accusations and development.
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In 2022, [[Hundeyin]] was announced as The Distinguished James Currey Fellow for 2023 as an academic visitor to the Centre of African Studies at the The [[University of Cambridge]] after signing a publishing deal with the founder of the program, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Onyeka Nwelue.] In March 2023, Hundeyin was dismissed from Cambridge after an investigation into his conduct with [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue] during his book launch at Oxford University. While [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue] was accused of misrepresenting himself as an Oxford University professor even though he was an unpaid Academic Visitor, Hundeyin was accused by attendees of the event of making misogynistic and sexist comments. On [[Twitter]], he presented his fellowship as being awarded by Cambridge University even though he was just an academic visitor under [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyeka_Nwelue Nwelue's] now discredited fellowship scheme. Hundeyin later accused Oxford professor Miles Larmer and Kaduna state Governor Nasir el-Rufai, an advisor to Oxford's African Studies Centre, of being behind the accusations and development.
  
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==President Tinubu==
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{{YouTubeVideo
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|caption=[[David Hundeyin]] speaking on [[MOATS]]
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In a series of articles<ref>''[https://westafricaweekly.substack.com/p/bola-ahmed-tinubu-from-drug-lord "Bola Ahmed Tinubu: From Drug Lord To Presidential Candidate"]''</ref><ref>''[https://westafricaweekly.substack.com/p/has-bola-ahmed-tinubu-committed-perjury "Has Bola Ahmed Tinubu Committed Perjury? The Evidence Says Yes"]''</ref> and [[YouTube]] videos,<ref>''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ec0IzAlgWQI "Tinubu Saga: 'If You're Moving Millions Of Dollars, You Are Classified A Drug Lord' - David Hundeyin"]''</ref><ref>''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KZUQAoXHAQ "YouTube: Bola Ahmed Tinubu: From Drug Lord to Presidential Candidate"]''</ref> [[Hundeyin]] reported that he had uncovered evidence that in the 1990s [[Bola Tinubu]] was a drug lord and [[money launderer]] handling millions of dollars, while working as an accountant for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobil Mobil on a salary of just $2,400 per month.]
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On 13 August 2023, interviewed by [[George Galloway]] on [[MOATS]], [[Hundeyin]] said that [[President Tinubu]] is a [[US intelligence]] asset who had been installed as [[President of Nigeria]] to do the bidding of the [[United States]]. [[Hundeyin]] said he is trying to get the [[FBI]] to release their files on [[Tinubu]], so that the public can see his criminal history.
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[[Hundeyin]] says that this information should be made available, especially because [[Tinubu]] is intent on going to war with [[Niger]] over the recent military coup, getting [[ECOWAS]] involved and causing the whole [[Sahel]] region to erupt. He said that [[Tinubu]] was not qualified to be president, that the [[US]] paid his election expenses, that [[Tinubu]] got nowhere near enough votes to be elected, as evidenced by the [[EU]] election observers: it's "visible to the blind, audible to the deaf", [[Hundeyin]] maintained. "Somehow at 4:00am he was declared the winner."<ref>''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYGJEC5094I "David Hundeyin: 'The US is Setting Africa Alight' | MOATS with George Galloway Ep 264"]''</ref>
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{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
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Revision as of 16:15, 15 August 2023

Person.png David Hundeyin   LinkedIn Twitter WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(investigative journalist, filmmaker, author)
David Hundeyin.jpg
Born1990
Alma materHull University
Founder ofWest Africa Weekly

David Hundeyin is a Nigerian journalist, activist, and author. He founded the West Africa Weekly, a Substack newsletter in 2021.[1]

Early life

David Hundeyin initially studied mass communications at Igbinedion University before going overseas to study creative writing at the University of Hull and graduating in 2011. After working several jobs including a contract position at KPMG, he returned home to Nigeria in 2013.

Career

David Hundeyin is an investigative journalist. His reporting style, at times open-sourced, has won him multiple awards but also earned him criticism. After participating in the #EndSARS protest, he left Nigeria when multiple threats were made against him. He sought asylum in Ghana.

NewswireNGR

In 2020, he wrote an article for NewswireNGR about Globacom and the work conditions and treatment of their Indian expatriate workers. After the story was published, the workers received their owed pay. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote Hundeyin a letter of appreciation for his journalism.

He also wrote an investigative report about the potential human rights violations coming out of a proposed infectious diseases bill in Nigeria's house of representative addressing the Covid-19/lockdown. This article won Hundeyin a "People Journalism Prize for Africa".

In 2021, Hundeyin wrote about the rape and death of a 26-year-old woman. The article and several Tweets by Hundeyin alleged that the suspect used a hotel owned by the wife of Nigerian politician Godswill Akpabio. Akpabio demanded a retraction from Hundeyin because he believed the publication gave the impression that the couple was complicit in the crime and threatened a lawsuit.

West Africa Weekly

David Hundeyin received a grant from "Substack Local" to start the newsletter, West Africa Weekly, on its platform in 2021. He attributed this publishing change to the creative and editorial freedom it afforded him. He accused Globacom, a telecom company, of throttling access to the NewswireNGR site after his report came out and said that the website would always get cyberattacks after he writes a story. His newsletter would be delivered to his subscribers directly through email instead.

In 2022, Hundeyin published investigative articles on Nigerian presidential candidate Bola Tinubu, tech start-up "Flutterwave", and the BBC’s West Africa operations. The reports initiated intense social media conversations between Hundeyin and the subjects of his articles or their supporters. Hundeyin is a supporter of Peter Obi, who ran against Tinubu in the 2023 presidential race.

In April 2023, Hundeyin published Nigeria president-elect Bola Tinubu's Guinean passport on Twitter which questioned his eligibility to become president. Hundeyin's Twitter account was locked for violating Twitter's policy on personal identifying information.

James Currey Fellowship controversy

In 2022, Hundeyin was announced as The Distinguished James Currey Fellow for 2023 as an academic visitor to the Centre of African Studies at the The University of Cambridge after signing a publishing deal with the founder of the program, Onyeka Nwelue. In March 2023, Hundeyin was dismissed from Cambridge after an investigation into his conduct with Nwelue during his book launch at Oxford University. While Nwelue was accused of misrepresenting himself as an Oxford University professor even though he was an unpaid Academic Visitor, Hundeyin was accused by attendees of the event of making misogynistic and sexist comments. On Twitter, he presented his fellowship as being awarded by Cambridge University even though he was just an academic visitor under Nwelue's now discredited fellowship scheme. Hundeyin later accused Oxford professor Miles Larmer and Kaduna state Governor Nasir el-Rufai, an advisor to Oxford's African Studies Centre, of being behind the accusations and development.

President Tinubu

David Hundeyin speaking on MOATS

In a series of articles[2][3] and YouTube videos,[4][5] Hundeyin reported that he had uncovered evidence that in the 1990s Bola Tinubu was a drug lord and money launderer handling millions of dollars, while working as an accountant for Mobil on a salary of just $2,400 per month.

On 13 August 2023, interviewed by George Galloway on MOATS, Hundeyin said that President Tinubu is a US intelligence asset who had been installed as President of Nigeria to do the bidding of the United States. Hundeyin said he is trying to get the FBI to release their files on Tinubu, so that the public can see his criminal history.

Hundeyin says that this information should be made available, especially because Tinubu is intent on going to war with Niger over the recent military coup, getting ECOWAS involved and causing the whole Sahel region to erupt. He said that Tinubu was not qualified to be president, that the US paid his election expenses, that Tinubu got nowhere near enough votes to be elected, as evidenced by the EU election observers: it's "visible to the blind, audible to the deaf", Hundeyin maintained. "Somehow at 4:00am he was declared the winner."[6]


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References

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