To anyone who has a hand in d terrorism in Arewa and Nigeria as a whole, may Allah deny them peace of mind, and may He bring an end to you all in a terrible manner.
Ya Allah, You see them, You know them and their sponsors, and anyone shielding them. Give us victory against them😭🤲
@Zizu2023 Yes, we don't worship 3 Gods that has birthday and dead day, born by his creation and Brutally killed by his creations. The God who ws bresfed, circumcised, cried and even died. We worship the eternal God
Nigerian artist Portable (Habeeb Okikiola Badmus) has released a video pleading for an end to the targeting and stereotyping of Fulanis in Yorubaland. Sharing how well they have treated him personally, he also pointed out that many people mistakenly target Hausas due to profiling. We applaud Portable for this responsible and timely message, and we urge other celebrities to follow his example in speaking out against discrimination.
Portable is far better than those bigots, wizkid and Davido
Another Christian terrorist was arrested in a fresh operation conducted on April 26 in the forest areas between Qua’an Pan and Bokkos LGAs of Plateau State. Troops engaged the suspects in a firefight, forcing others to flee.
One suspect was arrested during the encounter.
Items recovered include 30 rounds of ammunition, one AK-47 magazine, one motorcycle, two phones, and amulets.
Beware of those around you, even in sacred places.
The abductors responsible for the murder of a Catholic priest in Kaduna have been arrested.
Meet Douglas Henry, the alleged mastermind behind the brutal killing of Reverend Father Sylvester Okechukwu. In a chilling twist, it has been revealed that Henry lived in the same compound as the priest. He reportedly connived with bandits to kidnap Father Okechukwu, expecting a payout of only N200,000 as his share.
Even more shocking is Douglas’s role within the community: he served as a keyboardist and dancer in the church, frequently performing alongside his accomplice, 33-year-old Pate Yau. This revelation raises a haunting question: Can we truly trust those around us, even in sacred spaces?
Story: Theresa Indyeryo
The 5 largest LGAs in Plateau State are predominantly Muslim areas, particularly Hausa and Fulani LGAs.
These LGAs were initially part of Bauchi State before Plateau State was formed and include:
1. Jos North
2. Bukkur
3. Barkin Ladi
4. Wase
5. Bassa
Bauchi is a Hausa and Fulani state, so if you don't want Hausa and Fulani in Plateau State, I suggest requesting your government to return those LGAs to Bauchi State. As long as those LGAs remain in Plateau State, Hausa and Fulani will continue to be indigenous people of Plateau State. They are not settlers; they have every right in the state.
Hausa and Fulani have been ruling the state until 1948 when the last Emir of Jos handed over the state to his Christian friend, thinking they were the same.
You may attempt to distort the history of the Hausa-Fulani people on your platforms and substitute it with your own narrative.
However, the truth remains that without those 5 LGAs, Plateau State would not exist in its current form.
Those LGAs are the foundation upon which the state was built. Despite the violence, the Hausa and Fulani communities will continue to thrive in Plateau State.
It's imperative that we promote peace and understanding, rather than perpetuating misinformation and hatred towards Muslims.
Dear Parents,
I want to share one parenting secret with you. The one you won’t find in your regular blogs. And trust me, regardless of your faith, you will find this tip beneficial.
I want to explain why some kids become completely stubborn the more you punish them. I am doing this because I got some messages yesterday from people who have kids in the diaspora and how their kids have become stone-hearted to their parents’ warnings. It is indeed painful.
Remember that I mentioned the monumental book of Imam Al-Ghazali, Ihya’ Ulum al-Din. We have more things to learn from it.
In this book, he talked about a fragile part of a child's mind called the “Veil of Shame.” Note: Every child has this because they are born upon Fitrah (purity of the soul).
When a child does something bad for the first time, they usually try to hide it. They are afraid of being caught because they still value their dignity in your eyes.
The scholars explained that if a parent exposes the child, screams, yells at them, and punishes every mistake, you are tearing down their veil of shame.
Once a child realizes you already see them as a bad person, the humiliation has happened. They stop caring. You have destroyed their internal brakes. When they have no dignity left to protect, they will start doing those bad things openly and boldly.
How do you notice this in your child?
You can tell this is happening in your child when they stop trying to hide their mistakes and start becoming brazen or "strong-headed" when caught. This is a sign that the veil is thinning.
To fix this, you need to use a concept called Taghaful. It translates to intentional ignorance or pretending you did not see a fault.
Our Prophet (peace be upon him) taught us this. He did this with a young companion called Usama bin Zaid. But I see that our parents, due to their high expectations, are often too impatient to look away.
If you catch your child doing a hidden wrong, sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is pretend you did not see it. Do not confront them and strip them of their respect.
Instead, bring up the topic later in a general conversation. Tell a story about why that action is destructive, without looking at them or accusing them. Let their own conscience do the punishing. Let them repent and fix it in secret.
A parent who hunts down every small mistake will end up raising a child who has no shame left to lose.
Let me know if you want more of these scholarly parenting tips. I will be willing to share. My DM is full with different issues. I cannot answer everything, but I am sure with these tips, a lot of those issues will be solved by God’s grace.
Thank you for your attention.
Allah knows best.
They want to be left alone After eating dog meat & burkutu and blocking roads to kill unsuspecting travelers and sometimes cannibalise muslims like they did on sallah day. Nobody should stress them about their animalistic lifestyle, it’s their culture ba?
You do well!
Unguwan Rukuba: The Day the State Blinked
By Misbahu El-Hamza
@misbahuelhamza
Inside that church were not just mourners. The Deputy Governor of Plateau State, Mrs. Josephine Chundung Piyo, sat among them. Traditional leaders were present. State authority, in its full symbolic form, was there.
And yet, in that moment, authority shifted.
The demand was clear. The two young men arrested by the Nigerian Army on April 2, accused of participating in the burning of a "Yoruba Muslim house" in Dutse Uku, must be released. Not later. Not after investigation. But immediately!
Until then, nothing would move. Not the corpses. Not the deputy governor. Not the traditional leaders.
It wasn’t a kidnapping. No one was asking for a ransom. It was a protest. A show of strength. A test to the state authority. Whether it'll blink.
In seconds, what was supposed to be grief had become leverage.
The message reached Governor Caleb Mutfwang. He acted. Immediately, as demanded.
Read more... https://t.co/BlJbdzkB5g
My favorite Qur’an reciter is my mom. and wallahi, nothing comes close.
Every day after Asr, she would sit on her prayer mat and recite, and the whole house would go quiet, not because we were told to, but because her voice would calm everything inside us.
After Isha, she would gather us in the living room and teach us the Qur’an. One page every week, and on Sunday we would give hadda. If you failed you already knew there was punishment with house chores. No one ever wanted to fail, Because if you did, you’d be stuck doing chores, and my siblings would tease you for the whole week But today, I’d do anything just to fail again and hear her correct me one more time🥹😭
My dad used to say whenever she recited, he would listen until he fell asleep.
Until she passed away and left us in this world, and the house has never sounded the same. May Allah grant her Jannatul Firdaus and forgive her shortcomings. Ameen ya Rabb🥹😭🤲🏾
Dear @AJEnglish@AmnestyNigeria@amnesty@hrw@BBCWorld@bbchausa@NGRPresident@realDonaldTrump@khamenei_ir@HaramainInfo@SaudiNews50@Pontifex@BashirAhmaad@HighChiefOkoro@Realoilsheikh@ishakaa@NorthernFacts_
Jos is fragile and sensitive.
This crisis is not ordinary. It is deeper than what some people choose to see.
There are clear interests from both direct and indirect fueling what is happening.
I want to draw people's attention to the following matters:-
1. Plateau State Government’s Silence and Selectivity
The Plateau State Government has clearly created a system where some citizens are treated as more important than others. The evidence is there for everyone to see below:-
In Kanam Local Government Area, many innocent people were killed, including a frontline military officers, vigilante and several civilians. Yet:
-Has the governor visited the affected community?
-Is he unaware, or is he choosing to be silent?
-What has been done for the grieving families?
-Is Anguwan Rukuba more important than Garga?
-Where are the three senators who spoke loudly about Anguwan Rukuba but kept quiet during the repeated killings in Garga (Kanam) and when our brothers were blocked on the road and killed?
Silence in the face of injustice is not neutrality—it is complicity.
2. Failure of Security Agencies
The responsibility also lies with the Commissioner of Police and the Department of State Services (DSS).
Every day, social media is flooded with inciting, hateful, and dangerous statements capable of setting the entire state on fire. Yet nothing meaningful is done.
Key Questions:
a. Are you not aware of these threats and dangerous incitements circulating daily?
b. Just some weeks ago, the Commissioner of Police identified “flashpoints” within Jos metropolis, mentioning relatively peaceful areas like Gangare while ignoring known volatile areas such as Gada Biyu and Farin Gada, I came out boldly and reminded the police on how dangerous the places are, why my message was ignored?
c. Between Gangare, where elders ensured peace, and Gada Biyu, where a tricycle (keke) driver was killed and his tricycle set ablaze, which has now proven to be the real flashpoint?
d. An attack was carried out in Anguwan Rukuba just a few metres from a police station, are the perpetrators aware of weaknesses and vulnerabilities within the Nigeria Police system?
e. Where is the “Rapid Response” we see written on police vehicles? Is it just for show? If security agencies cannot effectively handle incidents close to their stations, how can they respond to threats that are farther away?
This raises serious concerns about judgment, preparedness, and capacity. The following questions must be considered must be answered in order to portray the image of everything:
1- Why are borders, markets, and known danger zones left without strong and visible security despite rising tension?
2- Why was the curfew relaxed without putting adequate security in place to enforce it or respond swiftly to emergencies?
3- Why are individuals like Dachomo, VDM, Abir, and the Berom youth leader not in custody despite the evidences available indicating incitements and insults?
4- Is calling on people to take the law into their own hands no longer a crime?