In Lagos streets, Igbo sons like Ajagbe Bomboy (Ugochukwu Dum Obiora) of Oshodi and Chikodi of Agbado once ruled with respect alongside Yoruba brothers and other tribes.
Bomboy, the legendary Igbo street king from Mgbidi, Imo State, brought order to chaotic Oshodi and Bolade markets in the 1990s—organizing okada ops, trader levies, and loyalty through strength and fairness. Similar Igbo hustlers shaped Alaba, Trade Fair, Mushin, Ajegunle’s gritty scenes, and Agege.
Lagos thrived as one big family under the Eko sun—until political bigotry flared around 1999, disrupting the harmony.
@confindence24 You people just wake up and start posting people's picture anyhow, on what audacity do you have to use my father's picture. Don't worry you will hear from my lawyer by tomorrow morning
Baba Tapa at is again… 😅😅😅
Omoh, leave this acting for Ibrahim Chatta, e too sabi.
Any role, he will eat it to crumbs 😍😍😍
He might actually be the GOAT
This is how stupid our people are.
Someone created this with his or her imagination, called it Ekwensu and you all believed it.
No energy, or spirit or deity has a face.. people are just using imagination (either good or bad).
When we're ready to learn, we will.