It is deeply troubling to receive reports from parents across Ọ̀ṣun State that WAEC candidates are still sitting for examination papers as late as 7:00PM. These are young students who left their homes in the morning with the expectation of writing their examinations under normal conditions. Subjecting them to prolonged waiting hours, fatigue, anxiety, and potential security risks is unacceptable. Examination bodies have a responsibility not only to uphold the integrity of examinations but also to ensure the safety, welfare, and dignity of candidates.
This situation is particularly concerning given that similar incidents of delayed WAEC examinations have sparked public outrage in recent years, with candidates in some parts of the country forced to write examinations late into the night. WAEC itself has previously acknowledged that such situations fall below acceptable standards.
We call on the West African Examinations Council (@waecnigeria), the Federal Ministry of Education, the Ọ̀ṣun State Ministry of Education, and all relevant authorities to urgently investigate the circumstances responsible for these delays and put measures in place to ensure that no student is subjected to such hardship again.
Our students deserve better. Their safety, well-being, and academic future must never be compromised by administrative failures.
#InsideOsogbo
Happy Birthday, Dr. Paul Enenche! 🎂🎉
Today, we celebrate God’s faithfulness manifested through the life of His servant, Dr. Paul Enenche. Your unwavering devotion to God, passion for souls, commitment to revival, and dedication to advancing the Kingdom have impacted countless lives across the nations.
Thank you for yielding yourself as a vessel in the Master’s hands and for continually inspiring generations to love God, pursue purpose, and stand for truth.
As you mark another year, we pray for greater grace, divine strength, renewed wisdom, and unprecedented manifestations of God’s glory in every area of your life and ministry.
May your latter days be greater than the former, and may the Lord continue to establish the work of your hands for His glory.
🎉 Happy Birthday, Sir! We celebrate and honour you today. 🎉
When I was Muslim, I would argue & say we had the same prophets as Christians.
But this one broke me:
Surah 17:101: Allah gave Moses 9 clear signs.
I knew the list. The staff. The shining hand. The drought. The flood. The locusts. The lice. The frogs. The blood.
I held onto those 9 signs like proof I had the real story.
But bro, you know what shook me?
There’s a night missing.
After all nine signs, right before Israel walks out of Egypt, something happens that the Quran goes completely silent on.
A lamb is slaughtered.
Its blood painted on the doorposts.
And death passes over every house covered by that blood.
The Passover.
I grew up hearing the whole Exodus story. But nobody ever told me about the blood on the door.
Islam just skips it.
And here’s what wrecked me.
The Bible, the book I was taught was corrupted, mentions the Passover over 70 times.
Exodus. Leviticus. Numbers. Deuteronomy. The Psalms. The Prophets. The Gospels. Paul.
70 times.
So I had to ask myself the honest question:
If men corrupted this book, why would they obsess over the same story for 1500 years? Across dozens of authors who never met?
You don’t forge a document 70 times.
That’s just not corruption.
That to me is preservation.
And then I read the line that finished me off.
1 Corinthians 5:7.
“Christ our Passover lamb has been sacrificed.”
That’s when it hit me.
The whole story was never just about Moses.
It was always pointing to a King.
The final lamb. Whose blood, when applied to your life, makes death pass over you.
Forever.
The Quran gave me 9 signs but hid the one night that explains why any of them happened.
Because the moment a Muslim understands the Passover…
he’s one step away from the cross.
After doctors informed him of the cost of his surgery, he broke down in tears, saying that in his 58 years of life, he had never held as much as N50,000 at once.
This man, Malam Lauwali Umar Makarfi, is in a heartbreaking situation.
He is currently unable to urinate on his own, whether day or night, and must be taken to the hospital because of a bladder condition known medically as bladder outlet obstruction/prostatic hyperplasia (enlarged prostate).
He is presently admitted at Manaal Specialist Hospital, located at No. C5 Zangon Aya Road, Kawo, Kaduna.
We are appealing to kind-hearted individuals to assist this servant of Allah with the cost of his surgery, which amounts to N534,000.
Account Number: 8105891413
Account Name: Alhassan Musa
Bank: OPay
Please help by sharing this appeal.
Before the end of this month, the Holy Spirit will reveal to you an idea that will change the trajectory of your family for good!
The siege over your family is broken today!
Amen.
We shared 3 signs that might be telling you it’s time to pause, reflect, and make a few adjustments.
No one gets it right all the time. We’re all figuring things out as we go.
Save this for later. You might need the reminder someday.
#GenZSummitAfrica#FUTURE#GenZSummit2026
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
Damilare Oderinde - 8 years old
Deborah Adebowale - 5 years old
Aisha Oguntowo - 10 years old
Lege Taiwo - 12 years old
Balkis Ayanwale - 8 years old
Asa David - 10 years old
Shuaibu Aliyu – 10 years old
Ahmed Aliyu – 7 years old
Muiz Aliyu – 5 years old
Jomiloju Ogunlola – age not known
Agune Noah – 8 years old
Elizabeth Abadi – 5 years old
Tosin Abadi – 9 years old
Pius Stephen – 5 years old
Hannah Ojo – 14 years old
Habidat Ayanwale – 7 years old
Mary Gabriel – 6 years old
Jacob Gabriel - age unknown
@officialABAT #BringBackOurChildren
Not a time to share a joke, promote entertainment or campaign!!!! People died, people are dying not from natural causes but TERRORISM AND BANDITRY… We cannot let this abnormality become our normal in Naija… The country is BLEEDING
Dear Fathers, please make time to spend with your family.
Your presence is more valuable than presents. The memories you create, the conversations you have, the prayers you lead, and the time you invest today will shape your children tomorrow.
#YemiDavids#Family
The Church is not quiet. While we prayed, danced and hoped, we equally took it to the street to voice out our frustration to the highest insecurity, injustice and corruption in our Nation.