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Nigerian youths | Zikoko!
  • Seven Nigerians on How They Keep Their Inner Child Alive

    Apart from Christmas and New Year’s, one holiday that excited me as a child was Children’s Day. Listen, it was a thing at home and in school. My mum made it a point to take us out, there was always a special activity or two in school, and a party for kids in our estate. 

    As an adult, it’s safe to say all that excitement has gone with the wind. Children’s Day is four days away, and I really couldn’t give a rat’s ass about it. It doesn’t help that it falls on capitalism’s favourite day of the week, Monday. But I recently caught a friend’s WhatsApp status and she seemed pretty giddy about it, and for a moment, I envied her. I missed that little boy who used to love this holiday and all other childish things. 

    Curiosity made me slide into her DM and find six other Nigerians to share how they keep their inner child alive. 

    Demola*, 31

    I indulge on those things that seemed elusive as a child because of money. Like buying ₦20k suya that I can’t finish, buying stupid gadgets I never use, withdrawing money just to stare at it, binge-watching anime and cartoons and anonymously commenting things that’ll sound stupid to any adult online.

    Nofisat*, 28

    I’m the only child of my parents, so I’ll always be the baby of the house. When adulthood comes with all its wahala, I just pack my bag and go back home to spend time with my parents. There’s a way they dote on me that makes me feel childlike. I can’t explain it, and I also don’t know if it’s the “only child” factor. My room has stayed the same for as long as I remember. So it still gives me that nostalgia of my little self getting prepped to go to school in the morning. 

    Aishat*, 29

    I try to keep doing the things I enjoy even if there’s no one to tag along. I attend a lot of events that are themed around adults having fun like children, like fun fairs. I also surround myself with people who enjoy the same things, and it helps me stay in touch with my inner child. 

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    Bolanle*, 40

    Toys were my thing as a child. Think of all the superhero figures, barbie sets, Legos, stuffed teddies, I had them all. On every birthday, I was always so excited about the new toys I’d add to my collection. At some point, I started saving up to buy the toys. As an adult, this love for toys has translated into a love for gadgets. Kitchen, home, office, bathroom and accessories, I’m always curious about all these things, so I end up buying them. It always makes me feel like I just got a new toy.

    Dotun*, 37

    I spend an obscene amount of time watching cartoons, and I’m a complete irritant while at it. You’ll see me laughing loudly and even pausing to mimic some of the characters. I remember an ex-girlfriend said, “I’m too old to be acting a fool for cartoons.” We had a fight afterwards. Life is hard enough and these cartoons help me forget I’m a man with bills to pay and other adulthood troubles to deal with.

    Kenny*, 30

    I eat a lot of junk food. This was a big part of my childhood. It was a thing with my mum because she used to get us biscuits, sweets and all sorts whenever we were shopping for school resumption. She didn’t just buy what she thought we would like, she took us along and we got to pick the stuff we liked. As an adult, that’s something that makes me feel like a child all over again, whether it’s when I’m eating or shopping for junk. I always have a special budget for it when I shop for groceries. Some of the traders assume I’m shopping for kids. I don’t even bother to tell them that I’m the big baby that needs spoiling.

    James*, 25

    I like playing a lot. I’m the uncle kids love to have around because they know I’ll roll in the dirt with them if they want me to. I’m the uncle who’ll sit down to play with their toys, play hide and seek and watch cartoons with them. I remember attending this house party with some new friends and when they asked for game suggestions I mentioned “boju boju”. Everybody had this “Guy, really?” expression on their face. If only they knew I was dead serious. 

    Read this next: 30 of the Dumbest Things Nigerians Did As Kids

  • What It Means to Be 30+, From the POV of New Inductees

    International Youth Day 2023 was on Saturday, August 12. To celebrate, I asked some newly inducted 30+ members how they feel about arriving on the third floor of their youth.

    What It Means to Be 30+, From the POV of New Inductees

    These individuals still feel youthful at heart even though Nigeria’s National Youth Policy restricts youths to those aged 18-29 years.

    “Something about beans doesn’t agree with me anymore” Adeniji*, 30

    Because of the 30-plus jokes flying around, it registered in my subconscious that I should pay extra attention to my health once I turn 30. I don’t know if I’m overthinking it, but it’s weird that my stomach can’t hold down beans anymore. I noticed this about two months after I turned 30. Once I eat beans, it’s the toilet straight. Until now, I can’t remember ever worrying about toilet troubles whenever I ate beans.

    “I feel the same as I felt when I was 20” Divine*, 31

    I’m here now and nothing feels different than it did when I was in my 20s. I roll my eyes when I read the 30-plus banter on Twitter. Or maybe it’s too early to tell but even my friends and family think I don’t act or look my age.

    “I’ll stay 29 for a while” Kenneth*, 30

    I turned 30 in February, but no one really knows, apart from my family members and close friends. I didn’t celebrate it. There’s just something about turning this age that rattled me, like I’m running out of time. By 30, I was going to have my own house, car, a steady paying job, and just have my life together, but none of that has happened. The only way to keep my sanity is by blatantly refusing to accept this age. So, I’ve pressed pause and will stay 29 for a while.

    “It’s only on the inside I feel like something has changed” Lynda*, Early 30s

    My body hasn’t changed much. My face hasn’t aged since I clocked 25. It’s only on the inside that I feel like something changed. My knees are annoyingly weak now; they keep giving out whenever I attempt to dance, sit for a bit or stand for long. I’m also taking my health much more seriously now, taking supplements and sleeping early.

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    “I should’ve been vocal about my work in my 20s” Dimeji*, 30

    I’ve realised that there are things I could have done better in my 20s. I should’ve been more vocal about my work. I envy the Gen Zs who find it easy to carry their work on their heads. I think some of us grew up with the mentality that you’re being unnecessarily proud if you do that, but these days, you have to speak for your work before it speaks for itself. Meanwhile, the statement about 30+ people wanting rest with lots of peace of mind is true. The best time of the day is when I lay on my bed to sleep.

    “A new kind of horny I can’t explain” James*, Early 30s

    Why didn’t anyone say anything about the random boners and urge to have sex almost every day once you turn 30, or is it just a me thing? My wife actually noticed first. Usually, we’d go at it twice a week, and it wasn’t because we had a schedule, it was just something that worked for us. This pattern has changed a lot since I turned 30. It’s like I just want to ejaculate every time. It’s so bad that I’ve had to help myself sometimes because I didn’t want to disturb my wife. Hopefully, it passes soon sha because I’m getting worried. I didn’t use to be this crazy about sex and orgasms.

    “Every conversation with my dad now leads to marriage talk” Bidemi*, Early 30s

    My dad used to be patient with me, but e be like say the man don dey taya, cos pressure don dey. Every conversation with him now leads to marriage talk. I’m not bothered by it because I know how to handle him. There was this particular year I didn’t go home for eight months. He had to beg me to come back. However, even I can’t wait to be married, and I’m hopeful that it will happen this year, in Jesus’s name.

  • What Makes 40+ Nigerians Feel Like They’re 20 Again? 9 of Them Explain

    It’s International Youth Day, so I decided to ask nine oldies what makes them feel young at heart. And I can’t lie, some of these guys are living life more than some people in their 20s.

    Tejiri*, 55, smoking

    I grew up in Warri and started smoking in secondary school. I started out with cigarettes, so it’s the only thing I really enjoy. I did try weed with a few friends in university, but it didn’t hit the same and I can’t explain why.

    Some people may look at smoking at least one cigarette after my meal as an addiction, but that time in my backyard late at night or early in the morning makes me feel really connected to my youth. For a moment, I’m not 55. With my cigarette, I’m just back to hiding at the back of classes, smoking weed with my friends.

    Amaka, 51, roasted pear

    My fondest memory of my youth is sneaking away from my chores at home to my grandmother’s house. She lived behind my street, so getting there was easy. I loved those brief moments of doing nothing with her and my favourite part was the roasted peer she gave me any time I visited. 

    So whenever it’s pear season, like now, I can’t do without buying some for me and my kids. It just makes life feel a bit simpler.

    RELATED: Nigerians, Here’s What Your Favourite Street Food Says About You

    Emeka*, 57, sports

    I played every kind of sport back in UNIBEN in 1985. I was always athletic as a kid, so from football to badminton and swimming competitions, I was front and centre. Then three years after university, I broke both my knees trying to jump over a fence to escape some thieves. I had to learn how to walk again, so sports was completely out of the question.

    I haven’t been able to play football or any really active sport like I used to. But swimming is something I’ve kept up with and I do with my youngest son now. It doesn’t give me the same adrenaline as competing in a match, but it makes me feel young being in a pool and just moving.

    Pamela*, 40, watching K-drama

    Right now, feeling young comes from the days I don’t need to do anything with myself. And watching romantic Korean movies takes my mind off everything that’s bothering me, especially my health. All the drama feels so unreal, but it’s what I love about K-dramas.

    Ronke*, 45, spontaneity

    I feel young again when I take spontaneous decisions. Normally, I’d have to factor in my husband and two kids, but the moments I take a decision to travel with a friend without overthinking things, I feel like a kid again. Mostly because spontaneity allows me to imagine my life without my current responsibilities.

    Dwin, 27 (but acts 40+), knowing what’s hip

    What makes me feel young? When I know the Gen Z slangs. Like ‘okuurr’, ‘big purrr’ (insert other Gen Z sounds).

    RELATED: If Gen Zs Don’t Say These 12 Things in a Day, They Might Actually Die

    Tomiwa, 40, fitness, work and a social life

    Being fit, active and having the energy to do everything I want or need to makes me feel like age isn’t catching up with me. My work in media also makes me feel like I’m plugged into the world and what is being created. I also engage with a wide range of people from different age groups. 

    There’s a lot to look forward to; a long optimistic horizon of things to accomplish and things I haven’t done yet. And living out what feels like a full life, with fulfilling work and social life, real friendships and families keeps me from thinking I’m getting old.

    Uche, 42, wine

    Every day I come back from work, I just want to catch up on my 7 p.m. shows like Tinsel, and end the day with a glass of wine at 10 p.m. Does it make me feel young? Not exactly. It’s just a momentary pleasure that stops time for a few moments. I don’t think about my two kids, my job or the fact that I’ll do it all over again tomorrow.

    Daniel*, 56, driving

    When I was in my second year at university, my father gave me his Peugeot 504 to get around. I was a young guy staying off campus and schooling in UNIBEN at the time, so that car unlocked a new level of freedom for me. 

    I was invited to every single party on campus the moment people noticed I had a car. Most people didn’t, so I was the guy who could pick up babes for the parties outside school. And of course, I could easily drive down to UNILAG, for instance. My social status basically went up in my second year, and it made me love driving, especially on wide-open roads.

    Now, I get those flashbacks to my party days when I drive sometimes. It makes me feel good and young.

    Onyeche, 52, dyeing my hair

    At the beginning of 2022, my daughter kept going on and on about how my hair wasn’t growing anymore. She suggested cutting and dyeing it gold. I felt it would be a bit drastic. But when she went back to school in March, I got bored and decided to try it out. She’d recommended a saloon, so I drove down and showed them a picture of the style she suggested. It had a side part and fade, but I didn’t want to over-analyse my decision at that point.

    When they were done, it was such a relief to get rid of my hair. The gold dye completely changed my look, and I loved it. I haven’t looked back on my decision since then. I even just dyed my hair red. It’s loud, but that’s the part about dyeing my hair that feels so youthful.

    ALSO READ: Beginner Tips to Know Before Dyeing Your Hair

  • Nigerian Parents Have the Most Exaggerated Reactions to Little Things

    I need you to read a part of the email my father sent to me concerning my piercings. 

    I wanted to know that I wasn’t alone in this. So I asked young Nigerians to tell me about the times their parents overreacted to simple situations. 

    “My dad threatened to disown me if I went for a job interview”

    — James*, 30

    My dad threatened to disown me if I went for a job interview. I was staying in Port Harcourt back then, and I wasn’t really getting great job opportunities there, so I decided I wanted to move to Lagos. I applied for a job and got an interview that required me to fly to Lagos. I told my dad about it and he started shouting. 

    He told me I could still find a good job in PH, but that was not part of my career plan, I knew I’d find better opportunities in Lagos. I’d always been the good child who did everything my parents wanted, and this was the first time I stood up for myself, to my dad’s shock. A few days later, I was getting ready to leave for the airport when my father’s lawyer called me (I didn’t even know he had one) and told me to stop by his office on my way. When I got there, he told me that my father had asked him to take me out of his will, and he wanted to find out what happened. I explained everything, and the lawyer said he’d speak to my father and that I should go for my interview. 

    When I got back to PH three days later, my father had calmed down. He wanted me to stay in the city where he could keep an eye on me, (I was 22 years old then) and that was why he was so angry about me looking for opportunities outside. This was basically his Nigerian father way of saying he was going to miss me. Anyway, I got the job and moved to Lagos, and my father was prouder than ever. 

    “My mum called my boss to complain”

    — Tunde*, 25

    My mum hated it so much when I came home really late from work. One day, she got fed up with it and she started complaining about my constant late hours at the office and doing so much work despite being paid so little. I didn’t say anything, and after a while, she stopped talking, and I thought that was the end of the matter. 

    On Monday morning, as soon as I got to work, my boss called me into his office. He told me that he wasn’t going to keep me past office hours again. He mentioned that my mum called and complained that she didn’t like her son coming back home late. The level of embarrassment I felt cannot be explained. 

     RELATED: Korean Parents Are Nigerian Parents in Disguise, Here’s Why

    “My mum threw away all my G-strings”

    — Amina*, 25

    I’d recently purchased a new set of G-string panties and I was wearing one of them on this fateful day that my mum saw me, because she was in my room at the time. She told me I wasn’t going to leave the house in such, and that I had to either wear full underwear under the G-string, or change completely. She won the argument, and I changed.

    By the time I got back, the panties were missing, and I knew who took them. I told my mum that if she didn’t give them back, I’d leave the house every day without wearing any underwear. Alhaja checked my bum every day for so long, to make sure I was wearing undies before leaving the house. And I never got my sexy G-strings back. My mum won. 

    “My father got upset because I didn’t introduce my boyfriend to my family”

    — Adeola, 25

    To be honest, I blame myself; I’m the one that carried my hands to tell my father that I have a boyfriend, and that’s why this wahala happened. My father lives abroad and I live here with my aunty. One day, I told him about the man I’m currently dating. The next thing my father said was, “Have you introduced him to your aunty?” I said no, and he asked why, and I said I’d do it eventually, but that it was too soon. 

    He asked again two weeks later, and I gave him the same answer and tried to explain that you can’t just introduce someone you just started dating to your family, that you have to give it time. That was how my father got upset and went into a long rant that involved a sprinkle of emotional blackmail. 

    He said, “I don’t understand why you have an issue with introducing your boyfriend to your family. I have nothing to gain from this; I’m just looking out for you. I think you’re just embarrassed about our family’s financial situation, and that’s why you don’t want him to meet your aunty. Anyway, it’s your life. I’ll never ask about you and your boyfriend again in my life. You can carry him and go. I don’t care, do whatever you like.” 

    The part about the financial situation blew my mind because both my boyfriend and I are in the same financial bracket. Oh well, my father has kept true to his words; he hasn’t asked about him again and I’m grateful. 

    “My father slapped me for losing my earring” 

    —Chiamaka*, 24

    When I was ten, I misplaced one of my earrings in church while running around. My father noticed the earring was missing when he came to pick me up. Without asking any questions, my father gave me a resounding slap, right in front of all the parents and Sunday school teachers.

    Everyone froze. My father quickly apologised sha and bought me ice cream. 

    ALSO READ: Nigerian Parents Will Never Spend Their Money on These 7 Items 

    “My father made me sleep outside for lying to him”

    — Mark* , 26

    When I was in JSS3, my father’s colleague told my dad to ask me if I could help him get the admission form required to get into my secondary school. He gave me the money to buy the form, but I foolishly used the money to buy a G-shock wristwatch. 

    My dad asked about the form many times throughout that week, and each time I told him a different lie. One day, he showed up at my school to find out what was going on, and the bursar told him that I hadn’t been to her office. My father was shocked, but he didn’t say anything. He paid for the admission form and waited for me at home. When I got home, he asked me about the form again, and I told him another lie. 

    Before I knew it, he went into his room and came out with a cutlass and said he was going to use it to design my body. It took my mother, my sister and my aunt to intercede for me. He said the only way he wouldn’t use the cutlass on me was if I slept outside that night. I slept on the pavement and it was the worst night of my life. 

    “I got two nose piercings and my father couldn’t take it”

    — Amaka* , 21

    In April, I got two nose piercings and my father couldn’t take it. We were on a video call and I could see that he saw them, but he didn’t say anything. Hours after the call, my father sent me a text addressing me by my full government name. Then he began to talk about my piercings and about how only prostitutes get such. 

    He also sent me Bible scriptures about how godly women should behave. He complained about my piercings until I finally decided to take them off because I no longer had the strength to endure his complaints. I’m getting them again this Saturday sha and I’m even using his money. This time, I have the energy to confront him. He should do whatever he wants to do. 

    “My father threw me out of the house because I came back late”

    — Peter*, 21

    My friends organised a party for my 18th birthday. I got permission from my parents to go, and they agreed as long as I came back early. Unfortunately, I got carried away and came back home by 5 a.m. When I got home, my father had thrown all my clothes outside the house. I banged on the gate, and my father came out and yelled at me. He told me to go back to where I was coming from. My aunt, who lived about 45 minutes away had to come beg on my behalf. I didn’t get to enter the house until 1 p.m. that day and my father didn’t speak to me for a few days. 

    ALSO READ: 12 Reasons Why Nigerian Parents Actually Give Birth To Children

  • The Next Level Campaign: A Recap of the 2019 Promises to the Youths

    Twitter is back! And it’s a reminder that 2023 is not as far as we think. So as the campaign strategies slowly begin, we want to remind you of some of the promises President Buhari made while campaigning for the 2019 elections . These were four promises to the Nigerian youth in the 2019 Next Level Campaign.

    1. Job creation across various sectors

    Bubu’s promise: Over 50 million new jobs will be created.

    Are you shocked?

    If this isn’t a part of any Nigerian electoral campaign, then just know the real elections haven’t started. One of the ways Buhari’s administration was hoping to achieve this ambitious figure, is the N-power program — one of the four “empowerment” schemes created in 2016 with a budget of ₦500 billion. The other arms focused on addressing poverty and hunger.

    It was going well, until…

    The government claimed that since 2016, the programmes combined have supported more than 4 million beneficiaries country-wide. Let’s even overlook that the target figure for just employment under this campaign was 50 million jobs. 

    Who runs the data for these guys?

    Because in May 2019, we saw Bubu’s wife, Aisha Buhari, criticising the administration managing the funds under Maryam Uwais — the senior special assistant to the President — for the lack of accessibility of the fund to the people. 

    Hm...

    If somebody sleeping in the same house with Bubu is asking questions, who are we not to bring back these questions even in 2022? 

    Our Question:

    Before Buhari even made this new pledge in 2019, who had benefited from the program since 2016?

    Now here’s another confusing part.

    The goal was to provide Nigerian graduates aged 18-35 with skills that are valuable to the global job market and a ₦30,000 stipend under the program.

    Are you thinking what we’re thinking?

    What’s the difference between this program and the Skills Acquisition & Entrepreneurship Department program under the National Youth Service Corps? 

    Absolutely nothing. They literally have the same target audience and remuneration for participants. So why pump money into creating something that already exists?

    It doesn’t stop there o.

    Even without the receipts to prove the benefits of this program, especially with the pledge to ensure more jobs for us, about a year in, Bubu set up the Nigerian Youth Investment Fund with another ₦75 billion in 2020.

    Hm…

    Now to the big question: 

    With the three million jobs yearly Buhari promised in his first term, and 50 million in his second term, what’s Nigeria’s unemployment rate looking like?

    Just look at this chart.

    Unemployment has quadrupled between the first quarter of 2015 and the second quarter of 2020. 

    How can unemployment be rising when every four years, candidates are promising thousands of jobs to the youths? What are the success rates of participants awarded after the programs? 

    These are the questions we need to hold Bubu by his kaftan to ask, with all the money being pumped into these youth empowerment programs. 

    2. A pledge to the creative industry

    As part of the promise to provide more jobs for the youths, this administration pledged to commit to the growth of the creative industry.

    Bubu’s promise: To invest in technology, as well as the creative and agricultural industry of the economy.

    So a little back story. 

    Small play and Buhari showed us that the Nigerian government can actually move fast. It all started from the attacks on offices of the national electoral commission by arsonists and gunmen, mainly in the South-east —  they claimed these attacks were orchestrated by Biafra stans. Buhari responded on June 1 2020,  with a tweet that angered Uncle Jack:

    Militant Bubu wan dey disguise, so Uncle Jack took it down almost immediately. 

    That’s how Bubu vexed and reported him to big daddy Lai Muhammed. Before we knew it, the government mandated all network providers to block servers from connecting to Twitter. 

    Glo users weren’t exactly sure though. If you don’t gerrit, forget about it.

    Anyway, that’s how Nigerians started Tweeting all the way from the United Kingdom in Ajah for seven months. After that love speech to the creative industry, Buhari threw our livelihood into the gutter for the rest of 2020. 

    How much did we really lose after 222 days of the  Twitter ban? 

    According to Netblocks — a watchdog organisation that monitors cyber-security and governance of the Internet — Nigeria was losing approximately $250,000 (₦102.5 million) for every hour of the Twitter ban. 

    The government finally agreed to lift the ban on January 13 2022, after insisting for Twitter to commit to: respecting our laws, setting up direct communication with the government to manage content that violates rules, establishing a legal entity under the Corporate Affairs Commission, designating a Nigerian representative and paying Bubu’s black tax. 

    I

    3. An overhaul of the education sector

    Bubu’s pledge: To improve education in the country, the government will do whatever it takes to prepare the teachers, curriculum and classrooms to attain the right educational goals and grow our country. 

    We’ll keep this short. 

    Let’s just recall that ASUU was on strike from February 2020 – December 2020 and still threatened us in October 2021 to commence another strike over unpaid salaries.

    Where is the ginger from the initial campaign to reform the educational system?

    4. Political inclusion for youths

    Bubu’s Pledge:  To introduce a special mentoring programme in governance with young graduates working with ministers and other appointees. The government would  also provide more access to youths as aides of cabinet members through opportunities for appointments in board and agencies.

    Plenty grammar.

    All this and for months, the government denied any massacre happening at Lekki toll gate on October 20 2020. More than a year later and we still don’t know who gave the command. 

    This is just another pledge to us that failed woefully, if we have the youths in governance, who are they and where were they when it mattered to us during the #ENDSARS protest? 

    The point of this recap.

    2023 isn’t as far as we think. You need to be clear on what you want candidates to bring to the table in their campaigns. We must stay vigilant and be aware of the promises that already exist and failed. 

    There will be no audio representation for us in 2023 on our watch.

  • #EndSARS: The Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry Is Now Sitting

    The 8-man Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry and Restitution to investigate cases of police brutality in Lagos is now sitting.

    The panel is led by Justice Doris Okuwobi, a retired Judge of Lagos State. The youth representatives on the panel are Rinu Oduala and Majekodunmi Temitope.

    The panel was constituted by the Governor of Lagos State, Babjide Sanwo-Olu on October 19th 2020, when he invoked Section 1 of the Tribunals of Inquiry Law of Lagos State which gives the Lagos State governor the power to constitute a tribunal when necessary, to inquire into the affairs of any public officer in Lagos State.

    Section 5 of the Tribunals of Inquiry Law of Lagos State also gives the Tribunal the power to conduct investigations into the proceedings.

    The job of the panel

    The panel will sit for six months, and it will draw conclusions from the statements of victims of police brutality in Lagos State, with the aim of determining and recommending compensation for victims and their dependents.

    The tribunal is also mandated to interrogate SARS officers responsible for the abuse of victims and recommend their prosecution. 

    The Lagos State Government also says it has established a ₦200 million fund for compensation to families and individuals who have been victimised by officers of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    Oath of secrecy

    Earlier on in the day, there had been some controversy about an “oath of secrecy” that panel members had to swear to.

    However, it seems the air has been cleared as lawyer, Mochievous, stated that the concerns were raised on the issue and the panelists will not be signing the document.


    [donation]

  • QUIZ: What Type Of Nigerian Youth Are You?

    Are you the “lazy” Nigerian youth that keeps our leaders up at night, or the relentless one that refuses to be knocked down by a flawed system? This quiz should be able to tell you.

    N.B: For as long as necessary, every Zikoko quiz result you share to social media will have #SARSMustEnd attached to it.

    Looking To Donate To The #EndSARS Movement? Here’s How You Can

    No amount is too small. Click here to help.

  • You’ll never be exposed to a crowd of people as diverse as those you’ll meet in NYSC camp. Although the living conditions are appalling these people almost make the whole experience worth it.

    There are the ones who just came back from the overseas and will start stressing everybody with ‘that’s not how we did thing in the States’ and accent.

    Even the ones who went to Cotonou will have British accent.

    There are the ones who were only interested in getting exeat so that they could go home.

    They didn’t come to suffer with you commoners.

    The ones who just came to drink their destinies away at mammy market.

    But on a serious note, they might have actually needed professional help.

    Then there were the ones who belonged to the school of hard knacks and only came to have as much sex as they could.

    It’s just three weeks, it’s that how the konji is doing you?

    The ITKs that were always volunteering for everything.

    They didn’t rest until they became platoon leader.

    The ‘do you know who my father is’ people?

    If you don’t geddifok out of here.

    The ones who were somehow so excited to be in camp.

    Have you seen the toilets? What’s making you happy?

    We can’t leave out all those promise and fail soldiers.

    The ones that’ll tell you don’t worry if you march well you’ll get posted to the capital and you ended up getting posted to a village without light.

    The ones who were only there for the food.

    All the food sellers at mammy market knew them.

    The ones you are pretty sure were old enough to have been in the first ever batch of NYSC.

    They might have even been your father’s age mate.

    The ones whose life mission was to never step foot on the parade ground.

    They did whatever it took and were always in the clinic.

    There was the friendly soldier everyone liked.

    They didn’t have any wahala.

    And the one who was only interested in making people miserable.

    But who offended you?

    The ones who came to camp to find love.

    And they found it o.

    The ones who secured their exeat with doctor’s report as soon as they stepped foot into the camp.

    Only you asthma, cancer, bronchitis and HIV. Take your wahala and go.

    So who did we leave out and which one were you?