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Area Boys: How Private & Institutional Intervention is The Key to Their Reformation

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I visited the Area Boys at oshodi recently, it was our first re-union in three months.

I wanted to make sure they were doing okay and also talk to them about the upcoming elections so they don’t become pawns in another election year.

If there’s one important lesson i learnt from the oshodi chess project, it’s the profound realization that all men can be criminals if tempted and all men can be heroes if inspired.

 

I have sat down with Cultists, murderers and thieves under Oshodi bridge and I have listened to them tell tales of the heinous things they have done for politicians during elections.

 

Some of them regret it, some don’t.

 

Before we can truly understand how we got to this point and what we can do differently, we need to go back in time…

There are thousands of thugs and area boys scattered across the nation but most of them didn’t become Area boys as adults, it all started when they were kids.

Chess in Slum

I traveled to Ogbomosho recently for a TEDX event and on our drive down to the university, I saw so many children wandering the streets, doing hard menial jobs to support their families in extreme impoverished conditions and I was terribly heartbroken.

 

The question that lingered in my head was “How will these children ever make it in life?”

Most of them will never get to know the vast opportunities that exist in a world that is constantly changing because the poverty of their parents has chosen this path for them..

The ones that are brave enough to seek greener pasture abandon their families and come to Lagos with high hopes of making it big and going back home with great wealth.

 

For many of them, there’s no going back if this doesn’t happen..

 

With time, it begins to dawn on them that the promise of a better life in Lagos was a facade and it was going to be an even greater struggle but this time without a roof over their heads.

 

The streets become their new home and their life of survival begins…

 

The children at this stage are the ones you see begging you for money in traffic, washing car windows, doing labor intensive jobs in Markets, working as bus conductors etc.

 

After the days job, they go back to sleeping in uncompleted buildings, under bridges and in dark corners.

 

The streets doesn’t care for the fragility that comes with being a child.

To survive, they must shed that innocence and become hardened.

 

They need to become much harder than the harsh realities of their existence. This is when they take to hard drugs, crimes and cultism.

 

The cycle of becoming an Area boy is now complete.

 

Our solution then becomes using brute force to eliminate a problem we have watched fester over time. The police Task force in their bid to fight back with raids and unjustified killings have only made the situation worse.

 

99% of the Area Boys under oshodi bridge have been to prison and correctional homes several times . Even during our chess project, we had to visit the police station at least 4 times to bail some of the Area Boys that were wrongfully arrested while working with us.

Going to prison only hardens them even more and creates disdain in their hearts for the law and society.

Some of them narrated stories of how their friends were killed unjustly and how they had to join cults to protect themselves.

 

AS MUCH AS WE HATE TO ADMIT THIS, THE NURTW IS PROBABLY THE ONLY REASON WE DON’T HAVE A FULL BLOWN AREA BOY CRISIS ON OUR HANDS YET. THIS IS WHY THEIR LOYALTY WILL ALWAYS BE TIED TO THIS SYSTEM THAT CATERS FOR AT THE VERY LEAST THEIR NEXT-MEAL.

 

This is why they’ll take 1,500 naira to put their lives on the line and wreck havoc on innocent citizens for another man’s selfish political ambitions.

We must do things differently this time.

The Chess in slums project has shown us what is possible if we look beyond the single story and societal stereotypes

“We’re all area boys” is a powerful statement that brought us together at a moment when we needed to believe in this dream

 

The Area Boys are doing okay. We helped the children find their place in the world again.

 

We must continue to engage them in our fight for a better Nigeria that includes all of us so they don’t become tools of destruction when their poverty and vulnerability becomes weaponized.

We got Dayo a bus earlier this year, he has built a successful transport business for himself in that time and is already saving up to buy another bus.

 

He is no longer a pawn in another man’s game, but a hero of his own story.

 

Dayo did not need to be sent to kill or commit crimes before he got a brand new bus, just being good and committing his time and service to the project earned him this.

This is how you build the moral compass of a society by rewarding good deeds.

Nature Abhors a Vacuum

 

There are new children under oshodi bridge now, but if you go there anytime in the morning, you’ll see them playing chess😊.

Word spread about Fawaz’s success story and now many of them want to be like him.

 

Today makes it exactly 4 years since we officially launched the chess in slums initiative, and I’m proud of all that we’ve accomplished in this time.

 

Tunde Onakoya

@Tunde_OD (Twitter Handle)

Korty EO Is an Extraordinary YouTuber Who Has a Positive Impact on Society 

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There is a stillness in Eniola Olanrewaju’s upscale Yaba, Nigeria flat. It matches the abiding sense of quietness that almost seems to envelop the 24-year-old when she retreats into her world. Eniola, popularly known as

Korty EO

, is one of the most popular faces in the post-digital creative taxonomy that has swept through Lagos over the last half-decade. In many regards, she is a poster child for the boundlessness that characterizes the grind and hustle of young people in Africa’s most populous city. Over the last four years, she’s worked as a graphic designer, writer, content creator, and videographer. Now she is one of Nigeria’s brightest YouTube talents, gathering almost 200k followers on YouTube and more than 100k followers on Instagram.

 

But Korty’s story did not start in Lagos. She grew up in Bodija, Ibadan.

“It was a safe area but my house in Bodija was not around the fanciest sides,” Korty said sitting in a rocking chair in her spartan living room last month. “My parents were very protective but that’s because they knew that our environment wasn’t the safest but if you asked me I was proud to say I lived in Bodija because it was a fresh area but I wouldn’t bring you to my house.” Growing up as the middle child in a family of five, Korty was aware of the limitations of her parents and strove to make a way for herself. She started out working as a graphic designer while enrolled in the University of Ibadan after a brief stint at Bowen University. “I saw that there’s a lot I could do and I could even not go to class if I wanted,” she said. “I was just freer and able to do my business.”

Her clarity of purpose meant that she always knew she was going to have to move to Lagos to pursue some of her grander dreams, even if she didn’t know what those dreams were at that moment. An opportunity came in 2018 when a modeling agency scouted her while in Lagos to get a certificate from her IT attachment office. But Korty was reluctant to step into the modeling world. “I said no because I used to think that models were shallow,” she said, half-joking.

Eventually, Korty decided to give modeling a shot. She was grateful for the extra income and the opportunity to explore Lagos’s creative community that her constant visits provided. In the modeling world, Korty was faced with having to navigate a labyrinthine maze of toxic booking agents and haughty designers who treated her poorly. “You can usually tell when someone is not so comfortable in a certain place,” she said. “Because I wasn’t comfortable, a lot of stylists did not pick me to walk their shows.”

Mostly observing other models strut their ways on glitzy walkways, Korty started to document their lives in short videos that piqued the interests of her fellow models. Soon after, she joined Zikoko, where she worked as a writer and content creator before convincing her bosses at the time to let her helm a show named HER that was dedicated to showcasing the often-overlooked life of women in Nigeria. In December 2020, after working with Zikoko for close to two years, she left to join Mr. Eazi’s music accelerator program, emPawa, as its head of content. Where Zikoko had a big collaborative culture that emphasized creative cross-pollination, emPawa was more independently structured, giving Korty free rein to pursue projects and create her work in her own image.

Korty EO @ Work

It was while handling the YouTube channel of emPawa that Korty began to see the potential of the platform to host the quirky, confessional-style videos that she really wanted to make. “I was always looking at the analytics and understanding how the platform works,” she said. “After a while, I was tired of it and I just left because I realized that YouTube paid.”

She, of course, wasn’t getting paid immediately. The YouTube channel started taking off with a video documenting the thought process of moving out of her parents’ house and quitting her job at emPawa to create videos for YouTube.

That was in 2020. In the months since then, Korty’s YouTube channel has taken definitive shape, anchored around two shows: Flow, with Korty, is an exploratory show into the life of celebrities and trendsetters in the Lagos and wider west African cultural scene. While the newer one,Love and Lies, is a dating show that chronicles the drama and comedy that follows setting random people on dates in Lagos. When she shoots her subjects, what Korty aims for is submersion, seeking a way to remove any distraction from their immediate consciousness and get as much information as possible from them.

“I put my camera far away from them so they can even forget that it’s there,” Korty said. “It’s usually me, my cameras, and a photographer because most of the people I film are in some sense celebrities and once they see too many people, they become guarded but if you make them comfortable they can express themselves.” Editing, though, is where it all comes together as she applies her experiences while staying true to the vibe of the shoot. It usually takes place over an active period of one or two weeks depending on the quantity of footage she gets.

The distinctive contours of life in Lagos and the city’s ever-present trans-generational tensions weigh on Korty’s mind and spill into her visual content. “I think Lagos is the center for a lot of things because there’s a lot of people here so it’s easy to find various communities here,” she said. “Sometimes I’m very conflicted about where I stand because I’m old Gen Z. I’m 24 and there are people being 18-year-old in 2022. It often feels like I’m in the middle because where does the class of 1998 fit into it all.” Still, the grind, hustle, and growing fearlessness of young Gen Z’ers’s in Lagos inspire her more than anything. “There’s more evidence of people’s patterns and lifestyles (in Lagos) because of the Internet and that brings more exposure. I feel like the Gen Z culture awareness in Lagos is so strong that it’s being transferred to other parts of the country but Lagos is the pinnacle.”

Korty EO

Still, existing in Lagos can take its toll, and navigating the YouTube payment model as an independent creator can make it even harder. “It was very difficult,” she said about getting her channel — none of Nigeria’s fastest-growing — monetized. “They have to send a pin to a post office. It’s very easy for people abroad but if you live in Nigeria, getting your pin and money is very hard.” Korty had to make a video detailing her frustration with the monetization process before further relief came and she worries about the next generation of indie creators hoping to share their talents with the world via YouTube. “With newer people coming into the platform, it’s really hard for them because they are confused. There’s a procedure but the procedure doesn’t work unless you get your pin and it’s mentally wrecking.

“There needs to be a better process for how people get monetized in Nigeria, if YouTube says it’s catering for everyone in every part of the world, they need to do that regardless of the difficulties in the country. I know that’s easy to say but that’s just it, it shouldn’t be better in one place than it is in another, and also I guess Nigeria should also care about these things enough to make it easier for everyone.”

Earlier this year, a video documenting Korty’s attempts to schedule an interview with Wizkid over three days in Lagos went viral. And it’s an experience that has only solidified her resolve. “For me, the main thing is that only a few things can stop me in this life,” Korty said. “Obviously, the goal I had was to get Wizkid but the real thing was for people to see how if you set a goal and you move towards it, you either get it or move really close to it.”

For all the inspirational themes of her videos and persona, Korty is not a filmmaker that really cares about cajoling an awakening in her audience, seeing her role as more of a guide on the facts of a situation or phenomena. “I think for me, my role is to talk about certain things, shine a light on them and leave people to take whatever they want from the video,” she said. “That’s why I tell people that my aim is not to inspire. If it happens that you’re inspired, that’s on you.”

Despite all her protestations to the contrary, Korty understands the impact of her videos and is warming up to her role as an archivist of Nigerian contemporary culture. “When I do things, I don’t have plans but they start to unfold and people start to see what it can become,” she said. “I’m just trying to make it in life, I’m really not trying to be a culture shifter but I also feel like if that is happening and people are seeing a pattern, it’s now up to me to see if I can accept that responsibility.

Korty EO

“I’m very aware that there is a growing responsibility and, if I don’t accept it, I might not grow, I could just be stagnant.”

In many instances, Korty is quick to reject tags or titles and as our conversation comes to a close, I ask what she identities as these days. “I’m starting to say filmmaker,” she said. “A lot of people would say that where do I get the audacity to call myself that because I make YouTube videos but if you put me up next to the YouTubers of today, there’s a clear difference. It’s also why I don’t like it when people call me an influencer because I didn’t sit outside Eko Hotels for three days to be called an influencer. Filmmaking is where I have found myself. In 2018, I was in fashion. Before 2018, I was designing. As time passes, I’ll stumble on something else. I don’t think I can do one thing for all of my life. But whatever I decide to do, I’ll succeed and be competing at the top.”

STORY BY OKAY AFRICA

BEAUTY VS BEAUTY: Which #BeautyTukura Photoshoot Pose Is Your Favorite? 

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Beauty Tukura gave the world one of the biggest contents during her stay as a “Bbnaija Housemate,” despite her short time in the ongoing “Bbnaija” season 7. The reality star built an army called “Beenavy,” who are currently at the forefront of stan culture in Nigeria.

Ranks Africa will continue to celebrate her by sharing the real #BeautyTukura with the world.

The poll here is just for fun. Aside from constant celebration on all our platforms with over 3.5 million followers, we are currently working on something (let’s keep it secret for now).

Vote your favorite POSE FOR FREE You can vote 100 times per login by clicking the photo.

Vote Ends 5PM 3rd September 2022

 

This poll has ended (since 3 years).
Choice #8
14.04%
Choice #7
12.64%
Choice #1
11.52%
Choice #10
10.39%
Choice #4
9.55%
Choice #9
9.27%
Choice #6
8.99%
Choice #5
8.43%
Choice #3
7.87%
Choice #2
7.30%

Reality Star Angel Smith sets the standard with the hottest images.

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The Internet is heating up as reality star Angel Smith shows some skin in a new photo shoot, and the Brand Influencer shared two sultry photos on Instagram, captioned: “I put these bitc*es on game; they should be kissing my feet.”

See Photos below

#Bbnaija S7: Don Jazzy predict 5 favourite housemates to win N100 grand prize

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Mavin producer, Don Jazzy has identified five housemates he likes in Big Brother Naija, BBNaija season 7.

Don Jazzy in a tweet on Thursday said he likes Doyin, Bryan, Bella, Allyson and Hermes.

The Entertainer said he will pop a bottle of champagne if any of them emerges the winner of the show.

Don Jazzy made this known when asked if he was related to Allyson

A fan on Twitter, @queenbleceen had asked “Wait, Are you sure #Alyson and @DONJAZZY ain’t related? Big head, big nose and deep voice all like Jazzy.?

He responded, “I like her too. I like Doyin, Bryan, Bella, Allyson and Hermes. Anyone wey win we go pop champagne. #bbnaija,”

The winner of the ‘Level up’ edition will walk away with a total of N100 million worth of prizes.

So far, eight housemates have been evicted from the show. Amaka was the last housemate to be evicted on Monday.

Currently, all housemates except the Head of House, Dotun are up for eviction on Sunday.

 

 

 

 

 

Jay Ayamey plans to reignite Nigerian rap scene

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UK-based rapper Jay Ayamey has vowed to reignite the Afro rap scene.

The Afro rapper who is set to release a new single, ‘Omo Yoruba’ said the Nigerian rap scene needs to be awakened as she vows to be the savior of the genre.

“I am very confident with Afro rap because I’m rapping on Afrobeats. Rap in Nigeria needs to be reignited and I’m the artist to do that,” said Ayamey

The first single that I’m going to release is guaranteed to have Nigeria chanting certain slangs. The song demonstrates exactly what Afro rap is and what the Afro rap Goddess is about to do in the Nigerian rap industry. To be honest my main inspiration was showing Nigeria exactly who Jay Ayamey is. The song demonstrates my confidence, cockiness, and lyrical skill.”

The sexy female rapper who has severally been seen wearing a designer gold mask also disclosed that has her identity.

Yes, the mask is my style. I want to be unique and different and I believe the mask allows me to do just that. I want my identity to be a mystery.”

N22m debt push me to attempted suicide in 2018- Comedian Real Warri Pikin

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Popular comedian, Anita Asuoha aka Real Warri Pikin has recounted how she nearly killed herself over N22m debt.

In the latest edition of #WithChude, the podcast hosted by Chude Jideonwo, the media personality, recalled how she was taken to “three different hospitals” before she regained consciousness after her attempted suicide.

The 32-year-old said: ”In 2017/2018 I had issues. Actually, I and my husband had issues, financial issues because we were in debt and everything. Then, I attempted suicide on June 6, 2018, but I didn’t die.

“Then they carried me to three different hospitals. In the last hospital when I woke up, I was like so I didn’t die? That meant God didn’t want me to die.”

She said the aftermath of her suicide attempt inspired her to venture into comedy “so I can use my story to heal people”.

“Then I told God that I was going to use my story to heal people because I felt like he didn’t allow me to die because he wanted my story to touch people’s lives,” she said.

“To me, it wasn’t a story that I was supposed to keep to myself and I knew the fastest way to do it was online.

“Then I had a small itel phone which I used. If you check, all the videos I did then wasn’t comedy to make people laugh but comedy to motivate people.

” I was always like even if you’re owing debt, the Federal Government is also owing debt, so you don’t need to kill yourself.

“Just take it one day at a time. So I think those things helped me heal because things I was supposed to tell myself, I was telling people.”

 

Funke akindele fell under anointing during service

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Nollywood actress and Deputy Governorship candidate of Lagos State under Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP) has explained the viral video of herself going into trance in a celestial church.

The actress took to her Instagram page to shed more light on the occasion that led to the viral video.

She wrote: “You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”

Psalm 16:11

The Celestial Church of Christ (CCC) SBJ Oshoffa  Memorial Cathedral joined me in thanksgiving of my 45th birthday celebration on Sunday 28th August, 2022. I worshipped with the congregation and I can’t quantify the joy I felt worshipping in the Celestial Church of Christ where I am not a stranger.

From there, I joined congregants at the Celestial Church of Christ, Wonderland Cathedral, Jesus Palace, Alaguntan, Iyana Ipaja to celebrate the 2022 edition of the Annual Prophet & Prophetess Anniversary and commit the new year into the hands of the Almighty.

“I am humbled by the devotion of the body of Christ in Alimosho LGA and draw from their example of stewardship and unwavering faith as I tackle my biggest undertaking yet.

My spirit was lifted and I enjoyed every bit of both services. #funkeakindele”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Regina Daniel join colleagues to celebrate mercy Johnson on her birthday

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She wrote a lovely tribute note to Mercy Johnson who she said has had huge impact on her.

Regina Daniels took to her Instagram to appreciate Mercy Johnson, apologised for the late birthday wish while sharing throwback photos.

Happy birthday my queen @mercyjohnsonokojie….. You have always been an inspiration and a true guardian to me, both in my acting career and my personal life.

On this day, I pray for God’s continuous blessing, love, health, wealth, prosperity and happiness for you and your family. Cheers to a woman of emulation. I’m sorry this is coming late mami,” she wrote.

Policeman Allegedly Rapes 17-Yr-Old Girl, Films Nude

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A 17-year-old girl has accused a policeman, Salihu Kazeem, of raping her and her friend at his residence in the Port Harcourt area of Rivers State.

The victim, while narrating her ordeal, said Kazeem allegedly committed the crime after accusing her and her friend of making unauthorised withdrawals to the tune of N500, 000 from his bank account.

The minor also accused Kazeem of trailing her after she reported the case at the Rumokpakani Police Station, adding that while she was job hunting sometime in March 2022, a friend introduced her to the policeman.

She said, “He accused us of stealing when we returned his Automated Teller Machine card, which he gave us to get something to eat after a friend introduced us to him.” He claimed that he had received many debit alerts and when we asked for the amount, he said N500, 000.

“He discharged my friend and kept me and the girl that went to buy food in his house.” He called his boys and told them that we were thieves.

 

 

“He asked us to take off our dresses and filmed us as we were naked.” He said if we didn’t cooperate with him, he would spread our nude videos. He took us to a room and slept with us till the next morning. ”

 

 

In his reaction, Kazeem, while denying the act, described the victims as hook-up girls, adding that they consented to the sexual act.

He, however, said the girls used his ATM card to make several withdrawals after one of the hookups.

He said, “When they came to my house, I gave one of them my ATM to buy food. They left with the ATM card, and I didn’t see them till 11 p.m. None of them called to tell me anything. The only thing I was receiving was debit alerts.

I tried to reach one of them that her friends connected me to for a hook-up. She told me she gave my ATM card to another lady and said I should not be offended. ”

Meanwhile, a lawyer with the Centre for Basic Rights Protection and Accountability Campaign, Festus Bomwin, urged the police command in the state to investigate the case in a bid to get justice for the victims.

The state Police Public Relations Officer, Grace Iringe-Koko, said the state Commissioner of Police, Friday Eboka, had invited both parties.

She said, “So, we are expecting them at the command today.” I am sure after hearing from them, a discreet investigation will begin and the outcome will be made known to the public. Whoever is found culpable will face the law. “