If you are broke as a man, it’s not only women that will treat you bad with utter disrespect, even your friends, family and enemies will treat you one kind. It’s only you and God.
Heavily pregnant women are only asking for stomach rub and warm hug from their husbands. Others are demanding burnt jollof rice from flooded Illupeju at 12 midnight with ram suya from kidnappers den.
No wahala.
Your fiancé is taking you to the East to see his parents. He booked a flight for himself and asked you to come by road, and you, unloved cow, still went🤦🏽
The older you get, the more you realize that freedom and faith don’t always have to be enemies. 👀🙏🏽
Some people left church and never looked back. Others left, explored life, and found their way back. What’s your experience?
The Fulani Kidn@pping People Are Not Nigerians, They’re From Chad— Abd¥cted Fulani Victim Claims
A Fulani man who was previously abd¥cted has shared his experience in captivity, arguing that cr+minal activities should not be used to stereotype all Fulani people.
Responding to a question about why he was not involved in kidn@pping despite being Fulani, the man said he was focused on his business.
“I’m Fulani and I cannot kidn@p people because I have a business I’m running,” he said.
According to him, the six-man gang that abd¥cted him was not made up of Nigerian Fulani but individuals he claimed were from Chad. He alleged that the kidn@ppers operated under the direction of a Hausa-speaking man and later carried out another abd¥ction in Abeokuta before disappearing.
The former hostage said many allegations against Fulani communities are unfair and d@maging.
“Most of the Fulani here in Nigeria honestly don’t want problems. We may have issues with cattle straying into farms, but we don’t kidn@p because it’s not our profession,” he said.
He added that there are different Fulani groups across Nigeria and that the kidn@ppers spoke a different variant of the Fulani language.
The man also claimed the kidn@ppers regularly communicated with their families while in captivity.
Lamenting the stigma attached to his ethnic group, he said, “If there was another name we could be called apart from Fulani, we would have changed it.”
He urged Nigerians to avoid judging entire ethnic groups based on the actions of a few cr+minals.