A perfect way to begin the year.
Perfectly written, loved the plot , the best crime thriller out of +234 that "I have read"
I recommend a million times 👌✅
Moses Simon, Jagun Jagun, Tasha
Agbara Nla, also known as "Ayamatanga" , was a powerful Gospel drama released in 1992 by Mount Zion Films Ministry.
The movie became extremely popular and scared many of us as children. It also brought Mount Zion Films into the limelight.Originally released in Yoruba, its massive success led to a full English version in 1994 titled "The Ultimate Power".
Instead of dubbing or subtitling the original, Evangelist Mike Bamiloye and the team completely reshot the entire film from scratch to reach a wider audience across Nigeria and beyond.
Did this movie scare you as a child too?
You see some businesses in some high rental properties and you ask yourself if truly it is profit from this business that they use to pay for the rent and electricity bills.
I see money laundering in disguise.
PAINFUL 😭
21-year-old dies after workers forget to attach safety rope and push her off 40-meter bridge in São Paulo’s Limeira, Brazil.
What sort of Error is this??
Just in: Nigerians Cover their ears in
horror as Governor Okpebholo uses his Angelic voice to sing a special praise and worship song dedicated to President Tinubu
In 2012, when I started farming in Kuje Area Council-Abuja, cashew trees were everywhere. Many local landowners planted them as economic trees—not necessarily for commercial production, but because they increased the perceived value of their land.
By 2013, the cashew industry had become a thriving rural economy. During harvest season, heavy-duty trucks lined up at Tipper Garage Junction in Kuje, buying cashew kernels for Nuts processing.
Farmers earned and the entire communities benefited from the value chain.
The boom continued through 2014, 2015, and 2016.
Then greed quietly replaced sustainability.
Instead of allowing the fruits to mature naturally, many people began harvesting prematurely to extract kernels early. The result was predictable: immature kernels flooded the market, quality dropped, and buyers began rejecting consignments.
By 2018, something even more alarming happened. Many of the cashew trees simply refused to fruit. In 2019 and 2020, some produced while others remained barren. By 2021, large numbers of trees appeared diseased and failed to fruit.
Today, the trucks are gone. The once-thriving cashew economy has largely disappeared. The trees remain, but many no longer produce.
What is most disturbing is that nobody seems to know why.
Nigeria has numerous institutions with mandates that should cover issues like this:
• Seed Council of Nigeria
• Forestry Departments and Agencies
• Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
• Research Institutes and Extension Services
Yet there appears to be little or no publicly available data explaining what happened to the Kuje cashew ecosystem.
A nation that does not invest in research is condemned to repeat its mistakes. We spend billions discussing agriculture, but when an entire economic ecosystem collapses, nobody can explain the cause, measure the impact, or propose a recovery strategy.
Agriculture is not sustained by speeches and conferences. It is sustained by data, research, and institutional memory.
Until we take research seriously, we will continue harvesting from nature without understanding the consequences—and acting surprised when nature stops giving back.
نهاية مأساوية لسبايدر مان اليمن بعد أن سقط في فوهة بركان خامد في مدينة دمت وسط البلاد
الدفاع المدني اليمني قال إن فرقه تواصل البحث عن جثته في مياه الفوهة الكبريتية الحارة
اشتهر الشاب القعقاع عنتر بتسلقه لأخطر المنحدرات الجبلية بما في ذلك فوهة بركان حرضة دمت الشهيرة بمحافظة الضالع
Akon reveals Middle Eastern royalty paid him $1 million for a private show
"I can't say which family, but they booked me for a million dollars for a private event in the Middle East. 'My daughter's the biggest fan'. Okay, amazing. They set everything up, I had a dressing room with everything on my rider. Top notch."
"The castle is so big I can't hear anything. They walk me to this huge hall with a monster stage, LED lights, lasers, everything. But there are only three chairs."
"Three people came. The daughter, the son, and the wife. She's sitting in the middle just cheesing, can't wait. So we start singing Mr. Lonely. The song finishes and she goes, 'Again!' The whole hour, that's all we performed. Just Mr. Lonely on repeat."