1BLOW
8.9K posts

1BLOW
@mopo0202
I'm a hardcore bodybuilder.
Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Temmuz 2022
114 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
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@twitgameboy I Bolaji by this time 2027 I'll be a millionaire in dollar and a billionaire in naira.
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Fulanis terrorists claim its war is rooted in the teachings of Prophet Mohammed on jihad, urging every Nigeria to convert to Islam or continue being sl@ughter.
"Tomorrow some people will come out to say that they are proud citizens of Nigeria? And you are there and these terrorists are planning on how to islamize and k!ll you. 💔
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Aye (black axe) ..
Eiye (air lords )
Bucaneer (sea lords)
Vikings ( aro mates ),,
Maphites ,,,,
All y’all do is to drink, fight and kêël each other claiming stup!!d ruggedity ., Bandits kidnap school children in Oyo state and y’all cannot unify to go fight and rescue dem …
Na men oo, Na men oo, na for mouth, I pour una spit …
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Just heard that someone was kidnapped around OPIC/Kara here. They reportedly abducted her alongside five other people and allegedly k!lled three of them. The kidnappers demanded ₦80 million in ransom, and the church even contributed money to help. The kidnappers got 20 million but still didn’t release them.
Apparently, it wasn’t until a fight broke out among the kidnappers that some of the victims were able to escape. After wandering around for a while, they realized they had been in OPIC the entire time.
My mouth has been hanging open since I heard this. This is someone I actually know. Nowhere feels safe anymore😭😭
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A Cry From the Persecuted Church in Nigeria: Please Do Not Forget Us 🇳🇬
To Christians around the world,
I write today with a heavy heart on behalf of countless families in Nigeria whose suffering is often overlooked. This is not about politics or attention. it is about children who have lost their parents, widows who have lost their husbands, and communities shattered by violence.
Recently, reports emerged of an attack involving a Christian school in Oyo State. What should have been a place of learning became a place of fear. While many children around the world celebrated Children’s Day with joy, some Nigerian children spent that same period in fear, grief, and uncertainty.
In our camp, we see the pain that headlines cannot fully capture. I remember a young boy who sat near the entrance every evening, waiting for his mother. He believed she would come for him, not knowing she had been killed. I remember a little girl who asked every night, “Did anyone find my daddy today?” Eventually, she stopped asking. not because she understood, but because hope was fading.
These stories are not rare. Many children have become orphans overnight. Many carry wounds that cannot be seen. They struggle with fear, trauma, and loss while the world moves on to the next headline.
Scripture tells us, “If one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26). Yet many of these families feel forgotten. This is not just Nigeria’s burden. These are human lives created in the image of God.
Despite their suffering, I have met believers whose faith remains unshaken. Widows still worship. Orphans still sing hymns. Families who have lost everything still proclaim that Christ is Lord. Their faith is a testimony to God’s sustaining grace.
Today, I ask for three things: pray, remember, and stand with the persecuted Church. Pray for grieving families, vulnerable children, pastors serving in dangerous areas, and all those living with the scars of violence. Pray that God will comfort the brokenhearted and strengthen those who suffer for His name.
Please do not forget these children. Do not forget these families. Behind every statistic is a face, a name, and a story. May the Church of Jesus Christ continue to remember and support its suffering brothers and sisters wherever they may be.
May God comfort the brokenhearted, defend the innocent, and strengthen His people. Amen.

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Three weeks ago, my 23-year-old neighbor was kidnapped on her way to Kontagora in Niger State.
While in captivity, the bandits repeatedly raped her taking turns sleeping with her night after night. Still, they kept bargaining with her father over the phone, demanding ransom even as they violated her.
Her father fought with everything he had. He hustled day and night, borrowed from everyone, took loans, sold whatever he could determined to bring his daughter home.
When he finally gathered the full amount, he called the bandits and begged them, ‘Please, give the phone to my daughter. Let me speak to her. I want her to know I’m coming for her.’
They gave her the phone.
In a broken, traumatized voice, she told her father: ‘Dad, do not suffer yourself looking for the money. They have been sleeping with me. I’m traumatized. I can’t forgive myself. Even if I’m released, I’ll kill myself. Don’t bother paying the ransom.’
Those were the last words she ever spoke to him.
While her father was still holding the phone, he heard the gunshot. He heard his daughter being killed. Moments later, the bandits sent pictures of her remains to him, a final act of cruelty.
A 23-year-old girl. My neighbor. Someone’s daughter, someone’s sister, someone’s friend gone in the most horrific way possible.
This is not just one story. This is the nightmare too many families are living in Niger State and across Nigeria. Young women snatched on the roads, violated, used as bargaining chips, and discarded like nothing.
Living in Nigeria has become truly scary. You wake up, you step out, and you don’t know if you or your loved ones will return home. The fear is constant. The pain is constant. And too often, justice never comes.
Rest in peace to my neighbor.
Sir David Onyemaizu🦍@SirDavidBent
As you're out there looking for your daily bread, I pray Nigeria never happens to you.
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“Your government has withheld Osun State allocation since February 2025, all because of politics. These are salaries of family people in 30 local governments. You see Nigeria leaders are not humans, they don’t care about you.”
— Zekeri Idris #CitizenMonitorsLive

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