Kiing Slick
For advert. Music hype, show promotion, event planning, Publicity maneger. DM for any��
24/01/2026
Badboi Bbk just dropped Nigerian Girl E.P 🇳🇬🔥
https://ditto.fm/nigerian_girl
23/01/2026
24 Nigerian Universities Make 2026 World Subject Rankings
No fewer than 24 Nigerian universities featured in the 2026 World University Rankings by Subject, marking Nigeria’s highest representation ever and making it the most represented country in Sub-Saharan Africa. The rankings span 11 subject areas, including engineering, life sciences, medical and health, and social sciences.
According to NURAC, the top seven Nigerian institutions on the list are the University of Ibadan, University of Lagos, Ahmadu Bello University (Zaria), Obafemi Awolowo University (Ile-Ife), University of Nigeria (Nsukka), University of Ilorin, and Covenant University. The committee said the results reflect steady improvements in teaching quality, research output, and international engagement.
21/01/2026
IShowSpeed hit 50M subscribers on his birthday while streaming in Nigeria.
20/01/2026
This is heartbreaking 💔 😢
Condolences to Families of 13 School Children K!ll£d in Road Accident In South Africa
Yesterday, a trág!c acc!d£nt near Vanderbijlpark in the Vaal, South Africa, claimed the lives of 13 school children.
Several others were injúr£d when a minibus carrying pupils collided with a truck.
Reports say the minibus driver was overtaking vehicles when a truck suddenly appeared ahead.
In trying to avoid a c0llisi0n, both vehicles swerved but ended up cráshing h£ad-on.
Families were left d£vastat£d, with one mother discovering that two of her children were among those k!ll£d.
Our thoughts are with the families of the victims during this heartbreaking time.
May their souls rest in peace. Amen 😭
19/01/2026
Meet 44 years old Bassirou Diomaye Faye, the democratic elected president of Senegal
Today, January 19, 2026, he declared a nationwide public holiday to celebrate Senegal’s Teranga Lions' triumph in the just concluded 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
08/01/2026
Muammar Gaddafi was a man who wanted Africa to finally see the light after Kwame Nkrumah. Where many only spoke, he acted. Where others compromised, he invested.
He did not merely quote Nkrumah, he attempted to implement the visions of Kwame Nkrumah and our Pan-African forefathers. A United States of Africa. A single African currency. An African Central Bank. An African Monetary Fund. An African passport. A self-reliant continent, no longer kneeling before the IMF, the World Bank, or former colonial masters.
Gaddafi understood what Nkrumah warned us about: political independence without economic independence is meaningless.
That is why he pushed for Africa to control its own resources, finance its own development and defend its own dignity. Libya under Gaddafi did not beg. It funded African projects, supported liberation movements, cancelled debts and spoke boldly against imperialism at a time when many African leaders were busy protecting their seats and pleasing Western capitals.
He saw Africa not as fragments of weak states but as one powerful civilization broken by colonial borders. He wanted Africa united not for symbolism but for survival. He knew that divided, Africa is cheap. United, Africa is unstoppable.
But he stood almost alone. Many African leaders feared unity more than exploitation. Some sold the vision for aid. Others betrayed it for personal gain. When Gaddafi needed collective support to push Africa forward, he was isolated. When imperial forces moved to silence him, Africa watched, some even applauded.
His destruction was not about "democracy." It was about control. Control of African resources. Control of African ambition. Control of an Africa that was beginning to think beyond permission. Today, Libya lies broken, but the ideas Gaddafi championed refuse to die.
If we truly want Africa to rise, we must remain rooted in Africa and maintain our integrity. We must reject borrowed thinking. We must think justice, unity and self-determination.
when a woman is hungry, the humane thing to do is put food in her mouth not your dick.
tell me why, I told this guy my stomach is empty & he js suggested to fill it up with cum.
gfbb💔😭😭
WilliamTroost-Ekong
Retiring from international duty.
it not ordinary abeg, just weeks to Afcon?
10/11/2025
Congratulations to Realwarripikin for bringing another princess to this wicked world.
Make she bring peace and blessing to your family.
10/11/2025
POV : When graphic designers collect your photo and start remixing your destiny 😭 cha cha cha, ummuna, clockittttttttt
They used the first picture to recreate designs. Which of the designs do you think it's the best?
16/10/2025
I always follow trending stories but will hardly share my opinions or drop hot takes because social media is wild 😂
So Blord actually sent ₦500,000 to himself to get VDM’s N∞∂lε
Truecaller Reveals The Account Number He Sent The Money To Belongs To Him.
13/10/2025
Have you ever paused to think about the cost of burials these days, especially ones handled by funeral service companies like Apams?
At the burial I attended last Friday, I couldn’t help but stare at the casket — sleek, polished, and expensive. And then it hit me: how much money was being buried with the deceased? Tens of thousands of naira, hundreds of thousands of naira, maybe more, spent on a wooden box that would soon become food for termites.
And I asked myself, to what end?
In today’s society, burials have become more about display than farewell. Families are often trapped in a silent competition — who can bury their dead in the most “honourable” way. But this honour is now measured by the cost of the casket, the size of the tent, the number of canopies, the number of cows, the kinds of food, or the brand of drinks served at the reception.
Some people spend millions on caskets. You’ll even see gold-plated ones, shining like trophies in the sun. And when mourners return home, the main topic of discussion isn’t the life the deceased lived, but how beautiful the casket was.
It’s as though the value of a person’s life now depends on the glitter of the box that holds their body.
Woe betide any family whose casket and the burial generally aren’t “up to standard.” The poor are often pressured — directly or indirectly — to go beyond their means. To borrow, to sell land, or to beg, just to meet the expectations of a judgmental crowd that will eat, gossip, and go home.
I’ve seen families that can barely feed while alive, yet when death comes, they find money to “give a befitting burial.” The irony is painful — people who went hungry in life are buried like kings in death.
If it were up to me, there wouldn’t be funeral service providers or casket shops. The old Igbo practice of burying people wrapped in mats — just as Muslims do with plain white cloth — would be upheld. It wouldn’t matter how rich you or your family is; everyone would be buried the same way.
Why spend so much on caskets (food for termites) when your siblings, friends, and extended family are starving? Why pour wealth into the ground while the living suffer above it?
When did we start believing that honouring the dead requires impoverishing the living?
Burials were once simple — a gathering of loved ones, a few tears, a farewell rooted in faith and memory. But now, they’ve become public shows of status, a stage where grief competes with vanity.
The funeral service companies now turn burials to circus with their displays.
Maybe we’ve lost sight of what truly matters. Maybe, in our obsession with appearance, we’ve forgotten that dignity in death isn’t bought with gold-plated caskets but found in the legacy of a life well lived.
We really need to do better.
© Mr Encee
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