Cast him as a biracial man who visits Aba in 2003, in search of his extended family after the death of his father who escaped the Biafran war.
There, he discovers culture, and falls for a sharp-witted young woman, with a harebrained plan to run away from her fate as a Priestess.
This one shook me to my core 💔
Nigeria has many ways of failing its people… and this is one of the cruelest.
Meet Gospel Uabari Kinanee. In 2007, he was just 14 years old. He left home to play football with friends and never came back.
For months, his family turned Rivers State upside down. Hospitals, police stations, morgues — they checked everywhere. No Gospel.
The search broke them. His parents sold their land, their property, everything they had to find their son. The pain and stress was too much. Eventually, both of them died from heartbreak 💔
The world assumed Gospel was dead too. Years passed. 18 long years.
Then in 2025, out of nowhere, his older brother got a call: “We found your brother. He’s in a correctional facility in Rivers State.”
For 18 years, Gospel had been locked up. A 14-year-old boy who went out to play.
When they asked for his case file, there was nothing. No charges. No court record. No reason for his arrest. Just a child… forgotten behind bars.
The worst part? Gospel lost himself in there. His mind couldn’t carry the weight. He doesn’t recognize his brother. He can’t explain how he ended up in prison. The boy who left home to play ball is now a man who can’t remember his own story 😢
How does a child disappear into the system for 18 years without a case?
How many more “Gospels” are wasting away in prison right now for nothing?
This is not just his story. This is a wake-up call for all of us.
Nigeria, how do we fix this? How many innocent lives are we still losing to silence and broken systems? Talk to me
#JusticeForGospel
I hate how this poor man is being videoed and has to be eloquent and respectful in his grief. I hate how the community members have to gather to host govt officials. I hate everything about this.
There’s a trending story of trapped miners in Zambia. Trapped in a mine for 17 days.
After exhausting every effort to dig an escape route with no success, the miners on the 3rd of May became physically drained and emotionally broken. One of them gathered his colleagues and offered a heartfelt prayer in Tonga:
“Lord, forgive us for our sins. Do not let us die like this without saying goodbye to our families. Some of us, despite being young, are the breadwinners of our families.”
Silence fell. With no strength left, they lay down to rest, believing their fate was sealed.
Unknown to them, rescue teams above were working tirelessly. Exactly 17 days later, on the 20th of May 2026, they were brought back to life.
A powerful reminder of hope in the darkest places. I can only imagine what these men went through.
While in law school the CLE is responsible for anything that happens to you that's why you must always report your movements and take the official exit form if you need to leave the campus.
In addition, each NLS student has a 1 Million Naira life insurance as stated by the then DDG of P. H. Campus.
This is the son of a politician explaining how his family had to flee Zamfara after kidnappers attacked their neighbourhood and threatened to return.
They had total of 7 armed vehicles to protect them!
4 army van, two police and one Civil defence vehicles that could have protected an entire community was at at beck and call of one family.
What about the ordinary families in Zamfara who don't have armed escorts, police backup, or the resources to relocate overnight?
These guys don’t care about you and I
Our mates in law school were kidnapped, and we still were going to class like nothing happened,
It’s cruel, really.
But it’s a culture we’ve grown and sustained over time.