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Activist VeryDarkMan and his supporters are hold¡ng a massive pr⁰test in Abuja.
11/06/2026

Activist VeryDarkMan and his supporters are hold¡ng a massive pr⁰test in Abuja.

Family, friends, and colleagues gathered in Lagos for the Service of Songs in honor of the late actor, Alex Ekubo, who s...
11/06/2026

Family, friends, and colleagues gathered in Lagos for the Service of Songs in honor of the late actor, Alex Ekubo, who succumbed to cancer. May his soul rest eternally in God’s embrace.

The life of the late actor Alexx Ekubo was a testament to the power of love and legacy, as family, friends, well-wishers...
10/06/2026

The life of the late actor Alexx Ekubo was a testament to the power of love and legacy, as family, friends, well-wishers, and Nollywood colleagues came together, cherishing memories and paying tribute.

"Nigerians, I Am Heartbr0ken Right Now. My Brother, Who Served In The Nigerian Army From The Age Of 20, Has D1£d. Now, T...
10/06/2026

"Nigerians, I Am Heartbr0ken Right Now. My Brother, Who Served In The Nigerian Army From The Age Of 20, Has D1£d. Now, The Army Has Told Us They Cannot Bring His Body Home For Burial Unless We Pay ₦2 Million. They Said That If We Do Not Send The Money, They Will Not Transport His Remains Back Home.

My Father Was Also A Soldier Before He Passed Away, And This Situation Is Very Pa1nful For Our Family. I Never Imagined That The Nigerian Army Would Deteriorate To This Point."

— Family Cries Out After Allegedly Being Asked To Pay ₦2 Million To Bring Home Deceased Soldier's Body For Burial❗

A grieving Nigerian family has raised concerns after claiming they were asked to provide ₦2 million before the body of their late brother, a serving soldier, could be transported home for burial.

In an emotional video, the deceased soldier's sister broke down in tears as she narrated the family's ordeal, describing the situation as both pa1nful and heartbr£4king.

According to her, her brother had served in the Nigerian Army since the age of 20 and was stationed in Benin when he reportedly fell ill and passed away.

The family had already begun preparations to lay him to rest beside their late father, who was also a soldier. A burial site had reportedly been prepared at the family home, with relatives gathering in anticipation of bringing the deceased home for a final farewell.

However, the gr1£ving sister claimed the family was informed that they would need to provide ₦2 million to cover the transportation of the soldier's remains from Benin to their hometown.

"We were told that if we do not provide the money, they will not bring his body home," she lamented.

The woman expressed disbelief over the situation, stating that she had always believed that serving military personnel who d1£d while in service would be transported home for burial through official arrangements.

She further alleged that when family members suggested arranging private transportation themselves, they were informed that once the body was released, any further responsibility regarding the deceased would no longer rest with the authorities.

The development has left the family deva6tated, especially considering the deceased's years of service to the nation and the fact that his late father had also served in the military before his d£4th.

"My brother dedicated his life to serving this country," she said emotionally. "Tell me why someone who served the government faithfully should d1£ and his family be faced with this kind of bûrden."

The claims have sparked reactions online, with many Nigerians expressing sympathy for the bereaved family and calling for clarification regarding the procedures for transporting the remains of serving military personnel who d1£ while in service.

As of the time of filing this report, the allegations remain the family's account of events, and official clarification from the relevant authorities has not been provided.

Emotional video/s in comment..........

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Owa-Onire: A Ghost Town and One Man Left Behind“Everyone ran. Lekan stayed. Now he’s the only name left to answer when t...
10/06/2026

Owa-Onire: A Ghost Town and One Man Left Behind

“Everyone ran. Lekan stayed. Now he’s the only name left to answer when the wind calls Owa-Onire.”

When the security team of 100 men from the drone unit, MOPOL, and the Anti-Kidnapping Squad rolled into Owa-Onire today, they found nothing but silence. No markets, no voices, no children. Just empty compounds, a locked mosque, a quiet church, and one man standing in the middle of it all.

The operation is part of the Inspector General of Police’s push to screen the Kwara South forest belts. Ifelodun, Isin, Oke-Ero, Ekiti LGAs — troops are moving through all of them. But Owa-Onire stopped them cold. A town wiped clean.

The only person left is Lekan, a prince of the town. He calls himself “the landlord” now, and the title fits. The big mansion, the abandoned houses, the mosque, the church — all of it belongs to the crickets and to him.
He didn’t stay out of courage. He stayed because “Bororo’s War” took everyone else. It didn’t start with one attack. Bandits came and came again. Kidnappings became routine. Then they took the monarch himself and held him in the forest for months until a ransom was paid. After that, the people couldn’t take it anymore. They locked their doors and left. Some went to Okeonigbin.

Most just disappeared into somewhere safer.
Owa-Onire isn’t alone. At least 28 communities in Ifelodun LGA are deserted. The same fate has swallowed Oro-Ago, Omugo, Ahun, Oke-Oyan, Owa-Kajola, Owa-Onire, and Oba in Isin LGA. Residents say over 23 villages have been overrun by suspected bandits. Ancestral homes stand empty. Farms rot. Towns become names on a map with no one to say them.

Lekan eats from his farm. That’s how he survives. There’s nowhere to buy food here, nowhere to buy anything. He’s alone with his land and the memory of a town that used to be alive.

The team leader handed him ₦10,000. Lekan took it quietly. He said he’d go to Okeonigbin to buy foodstuffs — the nearest place that still has a market.

He also told them people came into the community last night. He doesn’t know who they were or what they took. He just knows he heard them, and in the morning, nothing had changed. He was still alone.

Visibly disturbed by what they saw, the senior officers from Abuja and Lagos said no Nigerian community should be reduced to this. They described Owa-Onire’s abandonment as a failure that demands immediate action, and pledged to push for sustained security presence and concrete measures that will allow displaced residents to return home without fear.

“Two years ago, I was going through some financial difficûlties and visited a friend to ask for a loan of ₦50,000. He to...
10/06/2026

“Two years ago, I was going through some financial difficûlties and visited a friend to ask for a loan of ₦50,000. He told me he was br0ke and didn't have any money.

While we were talking, his girlfriend and her younger sister arrived. Immediately, he suggested we all go out to eat. At the restaurant, everyone ordered food, and the girlfriend and her sister even ordered takeaways. When we finished, the bill came to about ₦100,000, and he paid without hesitation.

As he was about to drop them off, his girlfriend asked for ₦45,000 to make her hair, and he instantly transferred the money.

When we got back to his place, I reminded him about the ₦50,000 I needed. He looked at me and said, "How can you be asking me for that kind of money after I've spent so much today? I already told you I don't have it."

I simply got up, left, and never went back”

— A man has shared an experience that ended a friendship after a visit to request financial assistance took an unexpected turn.

BEFORE YOU "DROP YOUR PHONE" AT A NIGERIAN POLICE STATION, READ THIS!​We’ve all experienced it. You walk into a police s...
10/06/2026

BEFORE YOU "DROP YOUR PHONE" AT A NIGERIAN POLICE STATION, READ THIS!

​We’ve all experienced it. You walk into a police station in Nigeria, and the officer at the gate or counter barks the standard order: "Hey! Drop your phone under the tree / inside that plastic basket before you enter!"

​Most of us comply out of fear, but have you ever stopped to ask: What is the legality of this practice? Let’s break down the law so you know your rights the next time you visit a station.

​1. The Legal Truth: Can they stop you from bringing your phone inside?
​Yes, technically they can. Under Section 4 of the Police Act 2020, the police have the administrative power to maintain security and order within their facilities.

A police station is a sensitive security zone. To prevent unauthorized recording of operational areas or protecting the privacy of suspects in cells, they have the right to say, "You cannot bring a recording device into this office."

​2. Where the Police Enter a Legal Minefield
​While they can restrict the phone from entering, how they handle your device is where they routinely break the law. There is a massive legal difference between a security restriction and arbitrary seizure.

​No Forced Seizure: If you choose not to enter, they cannot forcefully take your phone from you.

​The Constitutional Right to Privacy: Section 37 of the 1999 Constitution guarantees your right to privacy. Your smartphone contains your bank details, private WhatsApp chats, and personal data.

​No Unwarranted Searches: An officer at the counter has zero legal right to demand that you unlock your phone or scroll through your private messages just because you walked into the station.

To search your phone, they need a valid search warrant or a direct link to an active criminal investigation.

​The Duty of Care: If the police take your phone at the gate, they become legally responsible for it. Forcing you to drop a N500,000 smartphone in an unmonitored plastic basket or "under a tree" is a gross act of negligence.

If that phone is lost, damaged, or accessed by a third party, the police can be sued for damages.

​3. The Courts are Clamping Down!
​If you think the police can get away with this forever, think again. Human rights lawyers including high-profile cases handled by the likes of Barrister Deji Adeyanju in Abuja have repeatedly dragged security agencies to court over the unlawful seizure and searching of citizens' phones.

​The courts have consistently ruled that the arbitrary seizure of a citizen’s mobile phone at a checkpoint or station gate is illegal, unconstitutional, null, and void. The police have been ordered to pay millions in damages to citizens for these exact violations.

​Know Your Rights: What Should You Do?
​The next time you need to visit a police station to make a report or visit a loved one, protect yourself and your data:
​Leave it Outside:

The safest legal move is to leave your phone locked out of sight in your vehicle, or hand it to a trusted friend or companion to hold outside the station perimeter.

​Never Unlock Your Phone: If an officer insists on holding your phone at the counter, never unlock it for them.
​Know the Boundary:

They can refuse to let the phone enter the building, but they cannot confiscate it or snoop through your life without a warrant.

​Knowledge is power. Don't let compliance turn into the surrender of your constitutional rights!

My wife told me that I’m not the b¡olog¡cal father of our four children. Till now the mother and the children have blΩck...
10/06/2026

My wife told me that I’m not the b¡olog¡cal father of our four children. Till now the mother and the children have blΩcked me; these are children that I raised for over 20 years.”— Nigerian Man voices out.

"One day, my wife told me, “Mr Man, I said I should inform you today so it won’t be like am wasting your time. You’re not the father of my children.” I’m glad to inform you that you’re not the father of my four children.

I replied that DNA would prove it. She responded that she’s ready to stand on her words no matter where I take it to. I’m not the father of the children, and she’s just being truthful to me. All the children blΩ¢ked me immediately after their mother made that C0nfession, that they are all for her ex.

Then I accepted my fate because doing DNA is like wasting my money. At the end of the day, I will use the money to take care of myself instead. These are children I took care of for more than 20 years, without sharing bills with her, not even ₦100. I took full responsibility for everything, even school fees.

Instantly, I told the ch!ldren to follow their mother’s words. They shouldn’t see me as their father again. Even if they see me one-on-one, they should d!stance themselves from me because I had already accepted that I have nothing left. Forget about my body, I only know what have been through since that time. I’m already d∆mag£d...

On April 23, 2026, I bought a car on l0aπ after trading in my former car, which had become a constant source of pr0bl£ms...
10/06/2026

On April 23, 2026, I bought a car on l0aπ after trading in my former car, which had become a constant source of pr0bl£ms. I still had an outstanding balance of ₦4.5 m!llion to p∆y.

On April 28, 2026, I was taken away by the Nigerian Army under the guise of DSS officials. For three days in their custody, I was subj£cted to t£∆tmeπt that left deep sc∆rs on me phys!cally, emotionally, and M£nt∆lly.

Throughout those three days, I remained h∆ndc√ffed and bl!πdf0lded. During the day, I was left under the sc0rch!ng sun for hours without water. I begged and cr!ed for water, but nobody gave me any. At night, I was kept in an extremely cold room where I would cry and plead for help, but no one responded. I also received random sl∆ps from unidentified individuals.

Even after the court granted me bail, the tr∆μma did not end. I still wake up suddenly at night, strμggl!ng to sl££p as memories of those days continue to h∆unt me. What br£∆ks my heart even more is that the car I bought on l0an was d∆m∆ged. Sometimes I ask myself: what exactly did I do to deserve such tr£∆tment?

My only “0ffeπce” was speaking up and asking that my brothers and sisters serving in the military should be properly fed and cared for. Today, I can truly say that Nigeria happened to me. But despite everything, one thing remains certain: Justice can never be cracked.– Justice crack cries out after seeing the conditions of his car following release by the Nigerian army.

A young woman, Ihunda Nkiruka Jennifer, who was kidnapped in Port Harcourt has been found de@d. Her sister, Nurse Jane O...
10/06/2026

A young woman, Ihunda Nkiruka Jennifer, who was kidnapped in Port Harcourt has been found de@d. Her sister, Nurse Jane Ogbu, had gone online to ask for help in rescuing her sister. She claimed that kidnappers picked her sisters up and she managed to throw her bag away before they took her away.

In an update yesterday, June 5, the nurse revealed that her sister has been found de@d.

According to reports from family members, she was abducted by suspected one-chance operators. Her family immediately began searching for her and their search led them to a hospital around the Air Force Road area where they discovered her body had been deposited at the UPTH mortuary.

The family alleged that Jennifer was abducted around the Rumuosi area and later thrown from a moving vehicle around the Eliozu axis near Harmony Estate.

They claim she suffered f@tal head injuries after being pushed from the vehicle and showed signs of having struggled with her attackers.

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