I just finished an interview with Brad from Across Nigeria… and honestly, I’m sitting here stunned.
Today, he buried 14 Christians in a mass grave.
Two were infants.
One was a 4-year-old child.
And this isn’t some recycled internet story or political talking point. Brad was literally there today helping bury them. While on the way to investigate one attack, another Christian community was attacked. He said the violence is happening so fast they can barely keep up anymore.
What shocked me even more is this:
Brad shared that 72% of all Christians killed worldwide last year were killed in this region of Nigeria.
72%.
And hardly anybody is talking about it.
The mainstream media should be all over this. Instead, most people scrolling social media today have no idea our brothers and sisters in Christ are being slaughtered while churches are being forced underground.
Guys… this matters.
Please watch this interview.
Please pray for these families.
And PLEASE share this everywhere you can.
At this point, WE are the media.
WE are how people find out.
WE are the distribution network.
If enough ordinary people start sharing the truth, eventually the world will have to pay attention.
Watch the full conversation and help us get this story out.
@CustomsNG NONSENSE!!!
If not for the recording, you guys would’ve completely ignored this incident. The same thing happened to me on my way to Lagos in 2016.
I ended up paying that idiot 50k that day.
@Kwara_PoliceNG Awon Olori Buruku… you detained a TEENAGER for OVER 72 HOURS just for allegedly aiding her brother, then had the audacity to post it? Are you people alright at all? Go and read Chapter 4 of the Nigerian Constitution again.
@OurFavOnlineDoc Even if professors explain women to you, you won’t still understand those circus of delusional gender 😂Apart from svx some Nigerian ladies don’t have anything else to render to a man.
@lollis_Makeover@dammiedammie35 It is not the responsibility of the airline to check what is allowed & what is not allowed into another country. It is the duty of the passenger to familiarize themselves with the biosafety laws of the country of interest.
All the checks done at the airport are nothing but extra
@JcIambane16 I admire what you’re doing and would love to replicate it in Nigeria...but trust @PoliceNG to shut it down with an “accidental discharge.”
@AsakyGRN Seems d good Prof has selective amnesia about EFCC/ICPC arrests & invitations since this administration. Funny how he also forgets that Buhari’s tenure was widely criticized for nepotism & a tight inner circle. Not surprising many of those in power then are now under scrutiny.
@immortalstats Seems d good Prof has selective amnesia about EFCC/ICPC arrests & invitations since this administration. Funny how he also forgets that Buhari’s tenure was widely criticized for nepotism & a tight inner circle. Not surprising many of those in power then are now under scrutiny.
TINUBU goes to London and blames the SAHEL states for Terrorism, here are the UNDENIABLE facts Bola Tinubu. We are not your Tribesmen who are too stupid to see through your hypocrisy. YOU ARE AN IRREDEEMABLE IDIOT BOLA TINUBU or whatever your name is!!
Some Young Men Were Seen Celebrating As They Stripp€d a Lady N@ked At The ‘R@ping Festival’ In Ozoro, Delta State. This Is Completely Wrong And Condemnable.💔🤦🏾♂️
SEXUAL ASSAULT ON WOMEN AT OZORO FESTIVAL IS A NATIONAL DISGRACE
A society reveals its true character in how it treats its women. Where women are chased, stripped, groped, violated, and publicly humiliated by mobs under the guise of celebration, what is on display is not culture. It is barbarity. It is a collapse of conscience. It is a stain on our shared humanity.
The deeply disturbing reports emerging from a recent festival in Ozoro, Delta State are not just troubling, they are horrifying. Women were allegedly accosted in broad daylight, forcefully stripped of their clothing, sexually assaulted, and subjected to degrading treatment by groups of young men while others watched, recorded, and, in some instances, cheered. No woman should ever have to endure such terror, such exposure, such violation of her dignity.
This was not a festival. This was lawlessness. This was gender-based violence in its most primitive and shameful form.
These acts amount to a grave violation of the fundamental rights to dignity of the human person, personal liberty, and security as guaranteed under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), as well as other international human rights instruments. They also constitute serious criminal offences under our laws, including assault, sexual violence, and public indecency.
The NBA condemns these acts in the strongest possible terms. No tradition, no custom, no so-called cultural practice can excuse or legitimise the degradation and violation of women. Any practice that permits such cruelty is not culture. It is criminality.
We call on the Delta State Government and all relevant law enforcement agencies to act swiftly and decisively. The perpetrators must be identified, arrested, and prosecuted. Those who aided, enabled, or failed to intervene must also be held accountable. Justice must not be delayed, and it must not be selective.
Silence, indifference, or excuses in the face of such brutality only embolden further abuse.
We further call on community leaders, traditional institutions, and festival organisers to take urgent responsibility. Cultural celebrations must never become theatres of violence. They must reflect dignity, order, and respect for human life, not chaos and cruelty.
The protection of women is not optional. It is a legal duty. It is a moral obligation. It is a test of who we are as a people. Nigeria must not become a place where women live in fear of being stripped of both their clothing and their dignity in public spaces.
This must never happen again!
Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN
President, Nigerian Bar Association
Huwaila Muhammad
Chairperson, NBA Women Forum