I was in an oil firm for 8 years, chevron to be precise between 2010 and 2019
Nigeria happened to us and 18 of us were laid off for no reason
I built 2 houses for my family
After I lost my job I went back to the house I built for family
Fast forward to few years ago I left Christianity and chose islam
My family pushed me out of my own house simply because I built it for family
They denied me access to my 2 houses
I left heartbroken
started all over and I now i am a remote worker for both UK and US companies
Life can always start all over even at 50 bro
Don't give up
Bro to bro,
1.Masturbation weakens the penis.
2. Masturbation makes the sperm watery.
3. Masturbation makes one lose weight.
4. Masturbation causes weak erections.
5. Masturbation makes you ejaculate quickly during sex.
6. Masturbation affects sexual life and relationships.
Please avoid Masturbation!
@Davido
Debidoo, I know you're very generous, but I'm not asking for a handout.
I want you to buy copies of "English Language Class", a book I wrote and published in 2021.
I featured you and Chioma in it. (page 12 and page 37)
The book teaches the correct use of English Language in an entertaining and humorous way.
You can give copies to Rarara @kahuturarara and his entourage, and distribute the rest to public schools around the country as charity.
Sank you bery much in adbance.🤣
My little sister Qutar is one of the biggest OBO fans I know, so I had to make her day extra special. ❤️📞
A surprise video call with the Baddest himself, Davido. The smile, the excitement, the disbelief on her face… absolutely priceless.
Some moments are worth more than anything money can buy.
At the age of 27, you should have:
1. PVC
2. At least an iPhone 17 Pro Max
3. An international passport
4. A fully detached duplex in Lekki
5. Traveled to at least 5 countries
6. A driver's license
7. At least 3 cars
8. A monthly income of at least ₦16 million
9. Be married with 3 kids
10. At least 30k followers on social media
Signed - Dr. Farouk ✍️
Which of these do you have now?
Please, any insult directed at Rarara is for Rarara alone. It has nothing to do with Arewa or Hausa people.
In the same way, when a politician is arrested for stealing public funds, it is not an attack on the North.
I need you people to stop grouping us together.
Da farko, duk wanda yake da kishin Najeriya ba zai yi shiru kan matsalar rashin tsaro da ke addabar ƙasa ba, kuma ba zai hana wasu bayyana damuwarsu a kai ba. Rashin tausayi da fifita son rai ko zama karen en siyasa , da fifita son rai fiye da muradun al’umma ba abin alfahari ba ne. Ka kasance mai kishin ƙasarka, ka daina fifita siyasa a kan gaskiya, sannan ka ji tsoron Allah a cikin duk abin da kake yi @kahuturarara
Received my NYSC Exemption Certificate today. 🎉
NYSC said, "You are exempted."
I said, "Fair enough, I can't serve a country that didn't serve me either." 😂😂
No khaki, no camp, no mosquito bites. We move! 😎
#ProudlyABUSITE
Ali Kwara didn't wait for court orders. He did not need a badge. If you were a thief, a kidnapper, or a killer, he came for you. And most times, you wouldn't even see him coming.
This was not a movie; this was real life in Northern Nigeria. And while politicians were sitting in their AC offices, security agencies were being bribed left and right, one man was deep in the forest risking his life to catch criminals. No uniform, no salary—just guts, a rifle, and a mission.
They called him many names. Belshazzar, the Lion of Azare. One of his former classmates even said that he was not fully human—that he was half-human, half-jin. Because how else—how else can you explain a man who could track bandits through the bush, sniff out hideouts, and bring down armed gangs all over the North, sometimes before even the police knew what was happening?
Ali Kwara was born in Azare in Bauchi State, and he started hunting from a young age. But he was not hunting animals—he was hunting humans, robbers, kidnappers, terrorists. And he didn't just chase small thieves; he went after the worst of the worst.
One of the most famous stories was his battle with a notorious highway robber called Alain Barkeji in the late '90s. That one was like a full action movie. Barkeji had been terrorizing people around Azare, robbing them at gunpoint.
Ali chased him through the forest across villages, and finally caught him after a shootout. But the gist is, after Ali handed him over alive, the police claimed that Barkeji died trying to escape. And Ali was like, "Escape? With a broken leg and no weapon?"
This man didn't hold back. Even though he walked with the police, he didn't trust them blindly. And he used to say that unless security officers started fearing God and doing their jobs right, criminals will keep growing stronger. And he didn't just say it behind closed doors; he took it straight to the top. Ali Kwara reportedly spoke directly to President Yar'Adua and to Buhari, warning them that as long as security personnel were aiding and abetting criminals, Nigeria would never be safe.
And he was right. Nigeria's security situation was and is still a mess. So, a lot of communities just started calling Ali Kwara directly. State governors would even send for him when their own police had failed. When ransom money disappeared, when women were kidnapped, when entire towns were being terrorized, they would call him and he would go. No questions asked.
In one case, Ali and his team recovered 43 rifles hidden inside Bura Forest. Another time, he helped arrest a ring of kidnappers in Ningi and he recovered ransom money and phones. He even exposed—this was a major scandal—where some NSCDC and military officers were caught selling arms to criminals. Like, full uniform officers secretly giving weapons to kidnappers. And it was Ali that exposed it. He was not scared of anybody.
The gist on the ground was, once criminals heard that Ali Kwara was in the area, they would disappear. Some even abandoned their camps overnight. He was that feared by criminals.
But here's the part that most people don't know: Ali Kwara wasn't just a hunter, he was also a giver in his hometown of Azare. He gave out sacks of grains to widows and orphans—over 500 bags in one year alone. He built houses for relatives, paid school fees... If you were hungry and you came to his house, he would feed you. If you needed help, he would help. No long talk.
People said he feared no man, no beast. That he could walk into a den of lions and walk back out like it was nothing. Whether that's just a myth or not, what we do know is this man had courage that most people can't even imagine. No PR, no fame—chasing just results.
Later in life, his health started failing. He had heart problems and a spinal injury from a past accident, and it got worse with time. He died on November 6, 2020, in Abuja.