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kidnappers release children of Kaduna based medical doctor

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The two children of kaduna-based medical doctor, Philip Ataga, have been released by their abductors two weeks after they were abducted alongside their deceased mother from their home in Juji, Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna metropolis on January 25th.

Dr Philip Ataga who confirmed their release, said the children were dropped by the kidnappers at Ungwar Kati area along the Juji bypass at about 7pm on Thursday night February 6th. They were later picked by one of his relatives who brought them back home.

Their release comes barely a week after the kidnappers killed their mother, Bola, and dropped her body along the Abuja-Kaduna highway.

A policeman was spotted on bonnet of a Danfo (commercial bus) in Yaba area of Lagos state.

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A policeman was spotted in a viral video clinging to the bonnet of a Danfo (commercial bus) after its driver sped off in Sabo, Yaba area of Lagos state. 

Instagram user @theaplhaleke who shared the video, wrote; 

Earlier today in sabo, yaba; what do you think happens when you refuse pay for officer’s lunch?
Me I’m just saying oh… who knows, that asshole might actually committed a traffic offense

Here is the video below; 

Police Arraign Iyanya In Court For Alleged Car Theft

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The Police Special Fraud Unit (PSFU) Ikoyi, Lagos, has charged Iyanya Onoyom Mbuk, widely known as Iyanya, with alleged car theft.

The music star was arraigned before Justice Mobolanle Okikiolu-Ighile of an Igbosere High Court, Lagos on one-count charge marked LD/9024c/2019, Daily Post reports.

Prosecution counsel, Chukwu Agwu, a Superintendent of Police (SP), alleged that Iyanya committed the offence sometimes in September 2018.

Iyanya allegedly converted to his use or of another person, a Black Toyota Land Cruiser Prado Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) marked MAVINIY, with Chassis and Engine numbers JTEBX7FJ7EK165480 and 2TR1385954.

The vehicle belongs to The Temple Management Company Ltd, represented in court by Ayodeji Olomojobi.

The offence, according to the prosecutor, was contrary to Sections 278(1) (b), 279(1)(2) and punishable under Section 285(10) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

Agwu asked the court to remand the defendant in the Nigerian Correctional Services (NCS) custody, pending the hearing of bail application.

Iyanya’s counsel, Williams A., opposed and prayed the court to release the musician to him and undertook to produce him in court on the next adjournment.

Justice Okikiolu-Ighile, who granted the defence counsel’s prayer and released him to his counsel, adjourned till February 27 and March 17.

Read the Full List of Nigerian Words added to the Oxford English Dictionary

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In recent years, there have been many words that have been coined or created by Nigerians to explain certain concepts that other English speakers from around the world might not understand. As Nigerian culture especially through its movie industry, Nollywood and music from stars like Fela, TuBaba, DBanj, Wizkid, Davido, P-Square, Burna Boy and others like Tiwa Savage and Yemi Alade have crossed African and international borders, the world is taking note and Oxford English Dictionary published by Oxford University Press has recognized more words from the Nigerian  repertoire as formal English words that everyone in the world should recognize. The following is the official blog post on these new additions from the Oxford English Dictionary blog.

Release notes: Nigerian English

My English-speaking is rooted in a Nigerian experience and not in a British or American or Australian one. I have taken ownership of English.

This is how acclaimed Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie describes her relationship with English, the language which she uses in her writing, and which millions of her fellow Nigerians use in their daily communication. By taking ownership of English and using it as their own medium of expression, Nigerians have made, and are continuing to make, a unique and distinctive contribution to English as a global language. We highlight their contributions in this month’s update of the Oxford English Dictionary, as a number of Nigerian English words make it into the dictionary for the first time.

The majority of these new additions are either borrowings from Nigerian languages, or unique Nigerian coinages that have only begun to be used in English in the second half of the twentieth century, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s.

One particularly interesting set of such loanwords and coinages has to do with Nigerian street food. The word buka, borrowed from Hausa and Yoruba and first attested in 1972, refers to a roadside restaurant or street stall that sells local fare at low prices. Another term for such eating places first evidenced in 1980 is bukateria, which adds to buka the –teria ending from the word cafeteria. An even more creative synonym is mama put, from 1979, which comes from the way that customers usually order food in a buka: they say ‘Mama, put…’ to the woman running the stall, and indicate the dish they want. The word later became a generic name for the female food vendors themselves—Nobel Prize-winning Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka notably includes a Mama Put character in one of his works.

The informal transport systems that emerged in Nigeria’s huge, densely populated cities have also necessitated lexical invention. Danfo, a borrowing from Yoruba whose earliest use in written English is dated 1973, denotes those yellow minibuses whizzing paying passengers through the busy streets of Lagos, the country’s largest city. Okadaon the other hand, is first attested twenty years later, and is the term for a motorcycle that passengers can use as a taxi service. It is a reference to Okada Air, an airline that operated in Nigeria from 1983 to 1997, and its reputation as a fast yet potentially dangerous form of transport, just like the motorcycle taxi.

A few of the Nigerian words in this update were created by shortening existing English words. One example is the adjective guber (earliest quotation dated 1989), which is short for ‘gubernatorial’—so Nigerians, for instance, would call a person running for governor a ‘guber candidate’Another frequently used clipping with a longer history in English is agric. It was originally used in American English around 1812 as a graphic abbreviation for the adjective agricultural, but is now used chiefly in this sense in West Africa. In the early 1990s, agric began to be used in Nigeria to designate improved or genetically modified varieties of crops or breeds of livestock, especially a type of commercially reared chicken that is frequently contrasted with ‘native’ (i.e. traditionally reared) chicken. Two decades later, Nigerian students also started to use the word as a noun meaning agricultural science as an academic subject or course.

Also originating in the 19th century is K-leg, first attested in 1842 in British English, but now used mostly in Nigerian English. It is another term for the condition of knock knees, as well as a depreciative name for a person affected with this condition, whose inward-turning knees often resemble the shape of the letter K. It is of such widespread use in Nigeria that by the early 1980s, it had acquired a figurative meaning—a K-leg can now also be any sort of problem, flaw, setback, or obstacle.

The term ember months was first used in an American publication in 1898 to signify the final four months of the calendar year. Almost a century later, this expression was taken up again in Nigeria, where the months from September to December are usually considered together as a period of heightened or intense activity.

The oldest of our new additions that are originally from Nigeria is next tomorrow, which is the Nigerian way of saying ‘the day after tomorrow’. It was first used in written English as a noun in 1953, and as an adverb in 1964. The youngest of the words in this batch is Kannywood, first used in 2002, which is the name for the Hausa-language film industry based in the city of Kano. It is a play on Hollywood, following the model of Nollywood, the more general term for the Nigerian film industry that was added to the OED in 2018.

Nigerian Pidgin is another rich source of new words for Nigerian English. Sef, first evidenced in Nigerian author Ben Okri’s novel Flowers and Shadows, published in 1980, is an adverb borrowed from Pidgin, which itself could have been an adverbial use of either the English adjective safe or the pronoun self. It is an emphatic marker added to the end of statements or rhetorical questions, often to express irritation or impatience, as in this quotation from Adichie’s 2013 novel Americanah:

‘He could have given you reduced rent in one of his properties, even a free flat sef.’

Also coming from pidgin contexts is the verb chop, which is a common colloquial word in Ghana and Nigeria meaning ‘to eat’. However, beginning in the 1970s, chop also developed the sense of acquiring money quickly and easily, and often dishonestly. The negative sense of misappropriating, extorting, or embezzling funds is also in the earlier reduplicative noun chop-chop (earliest quotation dated 1966)which refers to bribery and corruption in public life. This likening of stealing money to actually devouring it is also reflected in the even earlier synonymous phrase to eat money (1960), as in the following quotation from Nigeria’s News Chronicle in 2016:

‘Our roads were not done. By the end of this year, you will know who ate the money of these roads.’

A few other expressions in this update would require some explanation for non-Nigerians: a barbing salon (earliest quotation dated 1979) is a barber’s shop; a gist (1990) is a rumour, and to gist (1992) is to gossip; when a woman is said to have put to bed (1973), it means that she has given birth; something described as qualitative (1976) is excellent or of high quality.

By focusing on contemporary language in this update, and adding words and phrases that form part of the everyday vocabulary of today’s Nigerians, we hope to give a flavour of English-speaking which, as Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie put it, is rooted in a Nigerian experience.

Here you can find a list of the new Nigerian words and senses added to the OED in this update:

Source: OED

Download Settled by Ada-Ehi Latest Single

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Ada Ehi Comes Through With A New Praise Offering SETTLED

You can’t seat for this one, as Ada Ehi opens 2020 with a banger and party starter single, titled SETTLED.

The 3mins 46 seconds track produced by multi Award winning producer, MASTERKRAFT and garnished with guitar strings by Fioke is a hard hitting Afrobeat jam, crossing over the walls of the Church into the heights of mainstream afro-culture, but this time, with a message describing God’s transforming power, potent enough to change levels and ‘settle’ you – very apt for a new season!

Listen and download SETTLED by Ada-Ehi

Download Altar of Praise by testimony

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Download: Testimony - Altar of Praise | Gospel Songs Mp3
Download Mp3: Testimony – Altar of Praise

Altar of Praise, a sensational and inspirational gospel singer, releases her latest single titled “Testimony.”

It is a song of praise done to celebrate the Lord God Almighty, for Grace, Mercy and Glory that has transformed challenges to testimonies and from story to glory.

It’s a single of thanksgiving for the faithfulness of God in keeping His Covenant and releasing His blessings.

“Altar of Praise” has been around with great gospel songs, such as “Lay your Hands” and “Carry me Blow.”

Her latest release will be blessed you greatly.

Listen and Download Altar of Praise by Testimony

EMMYG DROPS THE OFFICIAL VIDEO FOR HIS Song “FIND YOU”

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emmyg
Download Video: Find You - EmmyG | Gospel Songs Mp3
Download Video: Find You – EmmyG

EmmyG, a Gospel R&B sensation signed unto Diadem Multimedia International (DMi) premieres the official music video and lyrics for “Find You” directed by Lexten.

Shot on locations in Lagos, Nigeria and directed by Creative Director and Colourist, Lexten (DMS Pictures), this top-notch video is yet another testament to the vision of DMi which strives to create and express God’s image with excellence.

Produced by uber-talented Dami Ayeni (for DMi), “Find You”, is an alternative R&B and Afrobeats gospel song inspired not just by the genre itself but God’s unending love and acceptance of man whenever he falls out of place.

The song cuts across the norm in the gospel industry today, with the aim of reaching out to various audiences all over the world.

Watch Video of find You by EmmyG Below;

Download and Listen to Find You by EmmyG

BAPTISTA DROPS Two Songs “ORE BI JESU” & “ALL SUFFICIENT GOD”

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Download: Ore Bi Jesu - Baptista | Gospel Songs Mp3
Download Mp3: Ore Bi Jesu – Baptista

Titilope Baptist-Sanusi popularly know as Baptista starts 2020 with dual singles “Ore Bi Jesu” and “All Sufficient God” Produced by LegendaryEL.

Baptista comes with this friendship themed song titled “Ore Bi Jesu”, while “All Sufficient God” depicts the sovereign provisions of God.

“Ore Bi Jesu” is a Yoruba traditional song infused with an ancient hymn “No One Ever Cares For Me Like Jesus”

“All Sufficient God” is a personal experience I had with my father of His promise never to leave nor forsake and how God surprises me every single time of need, He arises” – She concludes

Download All sufficient God

Watch Nancy Pelosi Rip Up Copy Of President Donald Trump’s State Of The Union Speech

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Pelosi on it again.Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Tuesday ripped up her copy of President Trump’s prepared remarks at the conclusion of his State of the Union address.

As Trump finished speaking and most lawmakers stood to applaud, Pelosi stood, took the printed copy of Trump’s speech and tore it in half. She placed the shredded copy in a stack on the dais as Trump made his way to greet members of Congress.

Asked afterward why she tore the speech up, Pelosi told reporters it was “the courteous thing to do given the alternative.”

The moment capped a tense address from Trump that started when the president appeared to snub Pelosi’s offer of a handshake.

Pelosi largely seemed to avoid looking at Trump throughout the address, instead reading from his prepared remarks and scanning the room.

She and other Democrats stood and applauded only periodically, even as Republicans regularly gave ovations. Pelosi could be seen subtly shaking her head “no” when Trump pledged to protect Medicare and Social Security as well as rejecting his claim that Democrats want to provide “unlimited health care” for undocumented immigrants.

The speech came weeks after the House impeached Trump for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress and one day before the GOP-controlled Senate is likely to vote to acquit him.

Pelosi also made waves at Trump’s State of the Union last year, when her pointed applause at Trump calling for an end to “revenge politics” went viral.

Watch Video of Pelosi Tear Donald Trump’s Speech

Tiwa Savage Turns 40 Today February 5

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tiwa savage

Tiwatope Savage (born 5 February 1980), known professionally as Tiwa Savage, is a Nigerian singer, songwriter and actress. Born in Isale Eko, she relocated to London at the age of 11 for her secondary education. Five years later, she began her music career doing backup vocals for artists such as George Michael and Mary J. Blige. After participating in the UK edition of The X Factor and graduating from Berklee College of Music, Savage signed a publishing deal with Sony/ATV Music Publishing in 2009. Inspired by the growth of the Nigerian music industry, Savage moved back to Nigeria and signed with Mavin Records in 2012. She made an appearance on the label’s 2012 compilation album Solar Plexus.

Her debut studio album Once Upon a Time was released on 3 July 2013. It was supported by seven singles: “Kele Kele Love”, “Love Me (3x)”, “Without My Heart”, “Ife Wa Gbona”, “Folarin”, “Olorun Mi” and “Eminado”. The album was nominated for Best Album of the Year at the 2014 Nigeria Entertainment Awards and for Best R&B/Pop Album at The Headies 2014. Savage’s second studio album R.E.D was released on 19 December 2015. It yielded two singles: “My Darlin” and “Standing Ovation”. In June 2016, Savage signed a management and publishing deal with Roc Nation. In September 2017, she released her debut EP Sugarcane. R.E.D and Sugarcane have both been nominated for Best Album at the Nigeria Entertainment Awards.

In November 2018, Savage won Best African Act at the 2018 MTV Europe Music Awards, becoming the first woman to win the category. In May 2019, she announced her record deal with Universal Music Group and exit from Mavin Records. Savage sings in English and Yoruba; her music is a blend of Afrobeats, R&B, pop and hip-hop. Savage’s contributions to the Nigerian music industry have earned her several achievements. She has been involved in youth empowerment and breast cancer screening projects and has raised funds to build schools in Nigeria.

She shared a cute photo to mark her birthday on Instagram and captioned it:

“44-4”