Stay optimistic, a lot can happen within a short time

Joined August 2024
33 Photos and videos
Becky retweeted
The last time I was in Lagos I paid to enter a beach in Lekki. Not a resort. Not a water park. A beach. Sand. Water. A coastline that existed long before any of us were born. Someone bought it. Fenced it. Put a gate on it. Now you pay to touch the ocean. What kind of government sells its people access to nature? Happy Democracy Day. 🇳🇬
543
7,210
23,775
1,177,976
What Your TONGUE says About Your Health (lab scientist's guide) Stick out your Tongue. Look in the mirror. That organ in your mouth is a window into your blood. Here are 5 tongue signs that made me run urgent labs👇🏻
11
12
13
1,541
Becky retweeted
Dear Tinubu & his online supporters, The Usa - Iran war has ended. Price of crude is down. The war is over. Strait of Hormuz is open. When will petrol price go back to N500/litre?
92
1,390
3,803
52,533
Why your 'Chronic Malaria' might be Sickle Cell Trait You've been treated for malaria 10 times this year. You're tired of drugs. Your lab results are Normal between fevers. Here is what your doctor probably missed👇🏻
7
10
14
902
Becky retweeted
Nobody is supporting Tinubu because he’s competent Nobody is supporting Tinubu because he’s going to move this country forward Nobody is supporting Tinubu because he has improved the economy Nobody is supporting Tinubu because Nigeria has now become safe for people to live in and there’s no insecurity Anyone you see supporting Tinubu is doing it because of : 1) Tribe (Yoruba Ronu) 2) Religion 3) What he stands to gain from Tinubu 4) Ego (I’m suffering but I’ll NEVER admit on Social media that Tinubu is the worst president of Nigeria) 5) Gig or PR from APC politicians
144
471
911
27,692
Becky retweeted
Quietly, Dangote is handing his empire to his daughters. Fatima now runs commercial operations for oil and gas. The refinery, petrochemicals, fertiliser. Mariya runs cement and foods across every market. Halima runs the family office and the offices in Dubai and London. Three daughters. Three of the biggest arms of the whole empire. And while plenty of families here still fight over handing everything to the sons, the richest man on the continent just gave it to the ones who earned it. Turns out it was never about son or daughter. It was about who can actually carry the load.
22
155
1,232
47,657
Becky retweeted
Banditry is not surviving in Northern Nigeria merely because of government failure. It is surviving because the North, over time, has built an ecosystem that allows it to thrive. Behind the man with the gun, there is often a village that fears him or protects him. There is a relative who knows where he sleeps. There is an informant who watches the road. There is a supplier who sells him fuel, food, motorcycles, or ammunition. There is a negotiator who profits from ransom. There is a praise singer who turns him into a legend. There is a politician who makes statements after every tragedy and returns to silence. And there is an educated northern public that can trend gossip or sex scandals for days but treat mass abduction like bad weather. That is the part we do not like to say. The forest did not create banditry. It simply gave it room to grow. Banditry in Northern Nigeria did not begin today. Long before today’s headlines, northern trade routes and rural frontiers had a history of armed raids, cattle theft, attacks on traders, and criminal gangs operating in places where authority was weak. That is one of the ironies of our history. Many people today, especially in Southern Nigeria, look at banditry and conclude that Nigeria should break apart. Yet insecurity along northern routes was one of the problems colonial rule claimed it was trying to solve when Nigeria was amalgamated in 1914. Colonial authorities quickly discovered that the frontier was far less obedient than the maps they drew. Trade routes were disrupted by raids and ambushes. Traders and herders faced harassment. Rural authority was weak. Roads were unsafe. Violence had already become part of the region’s political economy. Even Lugard himself had some skimishes with armed bandits. So the problem is old. What changed was the scale, the weapons, the money involved, the collapse of local restraints, and the weakness of the modern state. The modern form of banditry did not begin with mass kidnappings or attacks on schools Either. It started in ways that seemed smaller and easier to ignore. In many rural parts of Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi, and neighbouring areas, the first signs were cattle theft, highway robbery, and revenge attacks between communities. One man’s cattle would be stolen. Another group would retaliate. Villages accused one another of helping criminals. Violence gradually escalated. This was the environment that produced men like Kundu and Buharin Daji. Today, they are remembered as notorious bandit leaders. But before they became feared names, they emerged from communities already struggling with insecurity, poverty, and weak government presence. In those communities, cattle were not just livestock. They were savings, school fees, food, and family wealth. Losing fifty cows could mean losing everything. At the same time, many people felt abandoned by the state. Some villages rarely saw police officers. Others believed security agencies only arrived after attacks had already happened. Many felt the courts were too slow or too corrupt to provide justice. Then communities formed vigilante groups to defend themselves. In many places, people welcomed them because they were desperate for protection. Nobody should mock people for trying to survive when the state has failed them. But over time, some vigilantes were accused of targeting entire Fulani communities instead of focusing on criminals. Others were accused of killing suspects without trial or punishing innocent people for crimes they did not commit. Whether every accusation was true or not, the stories spread. Young men heard that relatives had been beaten, arrested, or killed. They heard that Yan Sakai groups treated every Fulani man as a suspect. They heard that nobody would protect them. They believed nobody would listen to them. Every abuse became evidence. Every dead relative became a story. Every injustice became a recruitment tool. That does not excuse banditry. But It explains how it grows. Some men entered the bush claiming self-defence. But to survive in the forest, they needed guns. Guns cost money. So they stole cattle. The stolen cattle were sold to buy more weapons. The more weapons they bought, the stronger they became. The stronger they became, the more young men joined them. What may have started as a claim of self-defence slowly turned into organised crime. But that was one doorway into banditry. Another doorway was greed. Not everyone entered the bush with a grievance. Some people simply saw that violence had become profitable. A man with a gun could steal cattle, collect levies, block roads, command fear, settle scores, and become more powerful than the honest farmer or herder trying to survive. Once crime begins to pay more than work, society has already started advertising criminal life to desperate young men. Then the cycle began feeding itself. A man buys weapons for “self-defence.” Then he needs boys to carry those weapons. The boys need food. The food needs money. The money comes from cattle rustling. The rustling brings retaliation. The retaliation brings more weapons. More weapons bring more recruits. More recruits bring more mouths. More mouths bring more raids. At some point, the original excuse dies, but the business continues. That is how a grievance becomes an economy. From there, the violence became more organised. Cattle rustlers became armed commanders. Armed commanders became negotiators. Negotiators became local power brokers. Eventually, some became men that governments found themselves bargaining with. This is where figures like Dogo Gide and Awwalun Daudawa enter the story. They represent the stage where banditry moved beyond cattle rustling and rural raids and became a full ransom economy. Roads became dangerous. Villages became sources of taxation. Farmers paid levies before harvesting crops. Travellers became targets. Schools became opportunities. Daudawa’s role in the Kankara school abduction changed the trajectory of modern banditry. It showed that abducting schoolchildren could generate far more attention, pressure, and profit than traditional kidnappings. Kankara opened the floodgates. Bandit leaders across the region watched the panic, the headlines, the negotiations, and the pressure on government. What once seemed extraordinary quickly became a template. Schools became targets. Children became bargaining tools in a criminal economy. But there is a question that should bother anyone who thinks seriously about this problem. How do hundreds of schoolchildren get moved across difficult terrain by men on motorcycles and disappear into forests for days or weeks? How do armed men move, feed themselves, communicate, negotiate, and avoid capture across vast territories? The answer is simple. Bandits do not operate alone. They rely on informants. They rely on people who know the terrain. They rely on suppliers. They rely on people who help them sell stolen cattle and buy weapons. They rely on negotiators who contact families and governments during ransom discussions. They rely on relatives, sympathisers, and terrified communities where silence has become a survival strategy. As the Minister of Defence put it, the people around them are the oxygen of the business. That is the ecosystem. The men carrying the guns are only one part of it. In many cases, people around them know who they are, where they operate, who supplies them, and who benefits from their activities. Some stay silent because they are afraid. Others stay silent because they are related to them. Some profit from the system. Others simply do not want trouble. That is one reason banditry is so difficult to defeat. But this ecosystem is not only about food, fuel, weapons, and informants. It also has a cultural side. For generations, northern societies have had traditions of celebrating powerful and feared men. Figures like Kasu Zurmi and Gambo belonged to an older culture in which outlaws could become larger than life through stories, songs, and folklore. Modern banditry inherited that tradition and adapted it. Today, singers such as Late Suraju, Adamu Ayuba, Hamadu Makaho, Malam Jaka, Megari, and others help circulate the names of contemporary bandit leaders. The medium has changed, but the function remains the same. The criminal is transformed into a figure of prestige. That matters because prestige attracts followers. A young man is more likely to join a movement when its leaders are treated as powerful men rather than ordinary criminals. The praise song becomes part of recruitment. It becomes part of intimidation. It becomes part of the mythology that keeps the ecosystem alive. Social media has only expanded the reach of that mythology. The videos of bandits displaying weapons, cash, motorcycles, and armed escorts are not random acts of vanity. They advertise power. They project invincibility. They reinforce the status of particular commanders within the hierarchy of banditry. But this is where the argument must leave the forest and enter the city. Yes, communities around bandits have questions to answer. Some people are terrified. Some are trapped. Some are benefiting. Some know who supplies information. Some know who suddenly became wealthy. Some know which houses receive suspicious visitors. Some know which young men disappeared into the bush and later returned with money, motorcycles, women, and guns. But the problem is not limited to rural communities. The educated North also bears responsibility because too many of us have become accustomed to northern suffering. A leaked chat can dominate discussion for days. A celebrity scandal can dominate discussion for days. Social media drama can dominate discussion for days. Yet villages are attacked, students are kidnapped, farmers are taxed by criminals, highways become unsafe, and entire communities are displaced, only for public outrage to disappear almost immediately. We have attention. We simply waste it. That is why I struggle when people say the North lacks media power. The problem is often not the absence of a voice. The problem is how that voice is used. We can spend endless hours discussing gossip, politicians, celebrities, tribal disputes, religious arguments, and social media controversies. But when farmers are paying taxes to criminals before harvesting their crops, many people suddenly lose interest. That silence matters because banditry benefits when society quickly moves on. It benefits when attacks become routine news. It benefits when politicians know public anger will fade within days. Compare this with Southern Nigeria. The South is far from perfect. It has its own problems, hypocrisies, and distractions. But when insecurity affects some southern communities, the public reaction is often different. People organise. Unions speak out. Community leaders are pressured to respond. The media keeps the issue alive. In the North, we have become used to horror. That is not resilience. It is decay. There is nothing admirable about becoming comfortable with the abnormal. The more we normalise it, the easier it becomes for leaders to ignore it. The easier leaders ignore it, the stronger the criminals become. The farmer who cannot farm affects food prices in the city. The trader who cannot travel affects markets. The child who cannot attend school affects the future. A village paying levies to bandits is not buying peace. It is financing future violence. Banditry does not stay in the forest. The first thing we must do is strip away the romance. The bandit is not a hero. He is not a defender. He is not a freedom fighter. He is not protecting any community by taxing poor villagers, kidnapping travellers, destroying farms, and turning schoolchildren into bargaining chips. Whatever grievance may have existed at the beginning has long been overwhelmed by criminality. The second thing is to confront the ecosystem around him. Praise singers are not harmless entertainers. Informants are not minor actors. Negotiation rackets must be exposed. Communities that knowingly protect criminals must face consequences, while innocent communities must be protected from vigilante abuse. Security operations must be firm without becoming ethnic revenge. Traditional leaders must be held accountable. Rural economies must be rebuilt so that young men do not see the bush as their only path to power. And the educated North must stop acting like spectators. If we can make gossip trend, we can make the names of attacked villages trend. If we can spend days arguing about celebrities, we can spend days demanding action from governors. If we can organise political rallies, weddings, naming ceremonies, and religious gatherings, we can organise sustained pressure around insecurity. This is not about blaming victims. Many northern communities are trapped between bandits, vigilantes, poverty, and a failing state. But a society that wants to survive must tell itself the truth. These men do not come from nowhere. They come from communities. They rely on relationships. They depend on information, supplies, money, prestige, fear, and silence. Until the North confronts the entire ecosystem, we will keep chasing the man with the gun while ignoring everything that allows him to keep fighting.
77
364
630
43,138
Becky retweeted
Jun 13
As far as I am concerned the Devil himself is ruling over Nigeria through Tinubu. How do you explain a government who takes away every form of soft landing from the citizens and then lie to them that things are better despite their experiences saying otherwise?
117
2,036
4,278
48,190
What I learned from testing 100 people for HEPATITIS B I tested 100 random Nigerians for Hepatitis B. The results shocked me. Here is what I found and why you need to test TODAY.👇🏻
8
13
28
8,092
Becky retweeted
Your heart is the engine of your body. If you want to actually live longer, do these three simple things tonight: 1. Walk for 10 minutes after dinner. If you can't do 10, do at least 2. 2. Eat your dinner early and stop abusing salt and seasoning cubes. 3. Sleep before midnight. Your body needs those 7-9 hours to repair itself. You can start today. Deal?
179
1,171
5,454
171,878
Becky retweeted
This elderly man normally comes to check his B.P because he is scheduled for an eye surgery and they’re trying stabilize his high B.P before the surgery date. We got talking today and he told me that he is a mechanic and that two of his sons are doctors abroad. He even video called one of them and I had a brief chat with him regarding his dad’s health. I asked the baba why he’s still a mechanic and doing such hard jobs when he has successful children (His son even complained about it) and he said he went to Japan in 1989 to learn how to fix cars and there’s nothing else he can do with his life if he’s not a mechanic. In fact, that’s what he used to train his children. I showed him my car and i told him it’s due for servicing and general checks and he smiled and said if there’s anything he can’t fix in Toyota cars, even the manufacturers won’t be able to fix it. I’ve never seen such a thing before.😅
177
894
7,684
234,314
Becky retweeted
Ukam axis of Ibekwe - Ikot Akpaden road, Mkpat Enin LGA, Akwa Ibom State. Akwa Ibom State University is located along this road Mkpat Enin Local Government Secretariat is located along this same road Popular Ukam Market is located on this road Federal Government Girls College is located along this road. More than 5 Secondary Schools along this same road This road leads to 4 Local Government Areas. @_PastorUmoEno @aksgovt @EstherUmoh10 @LINUSOKON280 @platidoe @UdofiaEA @UdoBartho @InibeheEffiong
5
8
8
565
Becky retweeted
My aunt attended a wedding and gifted the couple a brand-new refrigerator worth ₦250,000. A week later, she heard they had divorced. The following weekend, she showed up at the man's house and asked about the refrigerator. The man thought she was joking. She wasn't. My aunt said, "I bought that fridge to support a marriage, not a divorce." When the man realized she was serious and didn't want any more embarrassment on top of what he was already going through, he went inside, brought out the refrigerator, and handed it back to her. My aunt loaded it into a vehicle and left.
156
150
1,328
83,155
Becky retweeted
In 1966, All African counties boycotted the World Cup to protest apartheid and how black South Africans were marginalized In 2026, All African countries supported Mexico against South Africa in protest against their xenophobia Live long enough
426
14,279
53,878
785,854
Becky retweeted
Jun 12
Different Bank Branch Managers within the same state usually know themselves one way or another. For example, a Branch Manager at Yellow Bank in Location A may have a relationship with a Branch Manager at Blue Bank in Location B. They attend the same industry events, belong to the same professional circles, and sometimes exchange information. If you're a salesperson leaving Yellow Bank for Blue Bank, there's a good chance both managers have discussed your move behind the scenes. This is why at interviews someone will always ask to know your branch. Sometimes, if both managers are not exactly on good terms, the manager trying to hire you may even push harder just to poach a valuable staff member from the other side. They're jobs you don't get because both managers didn't sanction the move. They will just use HR as a front to send you a rejection mail. This is why I always advise people not to announce their next employer to colleagues when they're leaving a job. There are many things that happen behind the scene in the corporate world, and you may never know who is speaking to who and their intentions. A little discretion can save you from problems you never saw coming.
14
17
119
10,439
Becky retweeted
I have interesting news for you.. The World Cup is not just happening on your screen. It is happening inside your body too. Let me show you 10 things the World Cup does to your body A thread
9
23
43
5,096
Becky retweeted
We cannot and we must not forget our kidnapped kids in the forest!!!
15
3,042
4,838
54,363
Becky retweeted
for fela mind now he go think say he witness bad government.
493
8,739
33,705
672,954
Becky retweeted
Cocaine 1-0 HIV
1,605
11,626
82,455
2,778,242
Becky retweeted
I listened to his story, and it broke my heart. Imagine raising four children only to find out that not even one of them is biologically yours. Some women can be unbelievably cruel. I pray he finds healing, peace, and the strength to move forward. May good people meet good people, and may bad people meet their fellow bad people. Amen. 🙏
88
54
101
5,703