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#endsars: All you need to know; Amnesty sets in


Rights group Amnesty International has raised concern about "escalating violence" in Nigeria against the #EndSars protest movement.

Armed thugs had attacked protesters at the headquarters of the central bank in the capital, Abuja, it said.

For their part, police accused people "posing" as protesters of looting weapons, and torching police buildings in southern Edo state.

Prisoners were also reported to have escaped from a jail in the state.

The protests started about two weeks ago to demand an end to police brutality, with mainly young people using the social media hashtag #EndSars to rally people to demand the closure of the notorious Special Anti-Robbery Squad (Sars).

The unit, formed during military rule in 1984, was accused of extortion, torture and murder.

The protests have also been backed by global celebrities such as Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, US rapper Kanye West, footballers Mesut Ozil and Marcus Rashford as well as Nigerian superstars Davido and Wizkid.

Protester holding a placardIMAGE COPYRIGHTREUTERS
image captionThe #EndSARS campaign has gained global attention

The government agreed to disband the unit, but protests have since snowballed into calls for wider reforms with protesters now also using the hashtags #EndBadGovernance, #BetterNigeria and #FixNigeriaNow to build support on social media.

There was an increased military presence in Abuja on Monday - a day after Defence Minister Bashir Magashi warned protesters against "breaching national security", the BBC's Nduka Orjinmo reports from the city.

Torture allegations

In Lagos, the country's commercial hub, protesters blocked access to the main international airport by barricading the road.

Amnesty said police brutality has continued, with a 17-year-old teenager, named only as Saifullah, dying in police custody in northern Kano state on Monday.

She had allegedly been tortured to death, prompting protests in Kano's Kofar Mata area, Amnesty added.

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Police have not yet commented on the allegation.

In other developments, Amnesty said police fired tear gas at peaceful protesters in Abuja, while armed thugs had early on Monday morning attacked activists who had been occupying the central bank's headquarters in the city.

Dozens of protesters were severely injured, the rights group said.

It was the latest in a series of "escalating violence and coordinated attacks" against #EndSars protesters, Amnesty added.

The attacks have also led to casualties in recent days in the cities of Benin in the south, and Oshogbo in the middle-belt, it said.

"We again call on law enforcement agencies to investigate these incidents and protect the protesters from further attack by hoodlums," Amnesty added,

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Meanwhile, the Edo state government has declared an indefinite curfew because of "incidents of vandalism and attacks carried out by hoodlums in the guise of #EndSars protesters".

Earlier on Monday, prisoners broke out of a jail in the state.

Local media reported that more than 200 prisoners had escaped, but there has been no independent confirmation of this.

In videos posted on social media, some men could be seen scaling a high barbed-wire fence said to be the prison walls.

Police said two police stations and a police post were attacked in the state by "persons posing as #EndSars protesters".

"The extent of damage cannot be ascertained at the moment but report indicates that the protesters carted away arms and ammunition from the armoury and freed the suspects in custody before setting some of the facilities ablaze," it said.

Some Twitter users responded to the claim with scepticism.

"Nigerian police that are happy to shoot at peaceful protesters suddenly froze when prisoners are escaping??" one tweeter commented.

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An unprecedented challenge to Nigeria's leaders

By Ishaq Khalid, BBC News, Abuja

The ongoing protests are clearly a strong message not only to the current government but to the entire political class in Nigeria.

The relentlessness of the young people is uncommon. Demonstrations like these rarely last for more than three days but these ones appear to be gathering momentum.

As well as calling for an end to bad governance and poor economic conditions, some protesters are also beginning to demand more action from the government to tackle widespread insecurity in the north of the country, where armed criminal gangs carry out deadly attacks and kidnap people for ransom.

The government's response to some of the demands of the protesters has been unprecedented too.

It has pledged to disband Sars, set up of panels to investigate and prosecute erring police officers and promised wider police reforms.

Another rare gesture is the public apology by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, who admitted that the government had not acted fast enough to address young people's concerns.

But the protesters remain unsatisfied, saying they need more action.

It is obvious that Nigerian officials are nervous about the ongoing protests and are deliberating how to handle them before they get out of hand. 

Omah Lay – Damn download


Omah Lay’s latest single ‘Damn’ has been omitted from his latest solo project titled “Get Layd” EP.

Quotable Lyrics:

She loves me when am drunk, when am jobless,
She loves me when am lost even when i no need love yeah.
She loves me like damn,
Like damn damn damn like damn damn damn damn damn damn damn.…

Listen and share your thoughts below!

Download now

Davido FEM- Lyrics



E be like you don dey talk too much
Small talk you don dey talk who talk
Fem (baddest)
Oboy you don dey do too much
Small talk you don dey look who talk
Fem (ah di baddest)
Person wey dey find the pity
Omo no dey give me itty bitty
Just call me, you wan know 30BG
You go know 30BG, when you see 30BG
You wey dey find the pity
Tell odogwu say we like to party
Just call me, you wan know 30BG
You go know 30BG, when you see 30BG
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Make unnu tell am to call me
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Why them com dey para, para, para?
Para for me
Why everybody com dey para, para, para?
Para for me
Why them com dey para, para, para?
Para for me
Na why 30BG we go para, para, para
Them go para for you
Before the, before the matter get serious
Before the whole matter gets dangerous
You need to make sure you don't say too much
'Cause if you say too much, I fit to run up on you
You see seh I get fans wey dey para gan
You see seh my own G pass G-Wagon
My nigga, I set trends, no Twitter, star
I get men, I no dey gather boys
I dey live my life, man dey turn am to shoot on sight
When be say na me dey give them life
Them go tell me who dey give them mind, give them mind
Live my life, man dey turn am to shoot on sight
When be say na me dey give them life
Them go tell me who dey give them mind, give them mind
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Make unnu tell am to call me
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Why them com dey para, para, para?
Para for me
Why everybody com dey para, para, para?
Para for you
Para, para, para
Para for you

Omah Lay- Bad Influence Download



 Nigerian Artiste "Omah Lay" Released this Hit Track titled "Bad Influence" as the 4th Track off his EP Tagged "GetLayd".

"Omah Lay" - "Bad Influence" was Produced by Omah Lay himself.

Enjoy and share below.

Download mp3

Omah Lay- Lo Lo Download


Omah Lay - LoLo Download MP3 Music: Nigerian Artiste Omah Lay Released this Track titled LoLo as the 2nd Track off his EP Tagged Get Layd. This song was Produced by Omah Lay himself.


Download mp3

Bobby Don ft Kaypee- Number one baby

 


Bobby Don comes through with another banger, this time featuring Kaypee.

This song is titled, Number One Baby. The lyrical work is very appealing and undoubtedly a jam that will blow your mind and strengthen your relationship.

Enjoy!

Download below and Share 


Download Mp3

'Every blacks outside Africa should find their ways back' - Burna Boy

 With his latest album, Twice As Tall, released last week, Burna Boy has outgrown his title of ‘African Giant’ and is taking on the world. But home will always be where his heart is. Now, he's asking his listeners to find out where their own hearts truly belong…

With his latest album, Twice As Tall, released last week, Burna Boy has outgrown his title of ‘African Giant’ and is taking on the world. But home will always be where his heart is. Now, he's asking his listeners to find out where their own hearts truly belong…

“Anywhere I go mo n’ lati pada si ile mi,” booms Burna Boy on the opening line of “Wonderful”, the lead single from his fifth studio album, Twice As Tall. It translates from pidgin English and Yoruba to “No matter where I go, I must return to my home.” It could be interpreted as the Nigerian artist committing to stay grounded in the wake of last year’s Grammy nominations, sold-out date at London’s Wembley SSE Arena and global recognition. But after speaking with him, it sounds much more like a rousing call to those with African heritage, both within and outside the continent, to remember and respect their roots. The way he sees it, Africa planted the seeds for modern society and, if we want to move it forward, then perhaps it’s time to go back to where it all began.

Burna Boy’s already there, of course, hunkered down in Lagos, Nigeria, where he’s seen out the pandemic while working from home on his album. “It's been great for me, but I can't say the same for everyone else,” he says of lockdown life. “I’ve spent it being creative, researching, finding out more about myself, learning more about ancestors, trying to exercise my mind and body.”

Released last Friday, Twice As Tall was crafted predominantly within his own home, a first for the 29-year-old, despite the fact that he’s almost a decade into his career. His particular brand of self-coined Afro-fusion, a sumptuous blend of global black sounds – Afrobeat, dancehall, reggae, rap and R&B – spearheaded a wave of mainstream Afro-influenced music that has crashed onto the shores of the UK with such force that we now have the recently launched Official Afrobeats Chart, giving the genre the same amount of recognition that rock, R&B and dance have enjoyed for decades. Burna Boy believes that it's resonated with British audiences so strongly due to the fact that most black people in UK are more aware of their roots, whereas lineage was erased by slavery in the US, but his London collaborator, Jae5, also sees another cause.

“It’s because of uni culture,” he says. “Before people such as Burna Boy and J Hus blew up, about seven years ago, DJs such as Stamina and DJ P Montana were throwing raves for 4,000, 5,000 people and all they were playing was Nigerian and Ghanaian music – straight up Afrobeats. The underground scene just kept on getting bigger and bigger and evolved into what it is now. I think it started way earlier than what people seem to think.”

Now, everyone's in on it and everyone wants to work with Burna Boy: most recently he's collaborated with Sam Smith, but his catalogue also includes songs with Stormzy, Dave, J Hus, Jorja Smith and Damian Marley, to name a few. Last year, he featured on Beyoncé's The Lion King soundtrack, The Gift (before we speak, I'm asked not to mention Black Is King, the visual album that was recently released to accompany it). For Twice As Tall, he called up Sean Combs (AKA Diddy) to ask if he would executive produce the album. Naturally, he obliged.

Despite the external input, his sound hasn’t changed since last year’s astronomically successful African Giant. More heavyweight features come in the form of Coldplay’s Chris Martin on the impassioned, reggae-influenced track “Monsters You Made”, but producers such as LeriQ, Telz, P2J and London’s own Jae5 have ensured the Afro-fusion flavour still runs through.


Jae5 worked on Twice As Tall’s “Bank On It”, after collaborating with Burna Boy on his third album, Outside, and his features with J Hus and Dave, and recalls working on the track with him and Randy Valentine. “The vibe was amazing. We got in the studio, they hotboxed the room – I don’t even smoke, but it gets me intoxicated,” he says, laughing. They were supposed to be working on another song, but Burna Boy and Valentine wanted to start fresh when things weren’t falling into place. “I was like, ‘It’s the drugs,’ but it turned out to be way better than what we were originally doing. It was natural. Randy was on the keyboard, I was playing the bass and he was just vibesing the melody for an hour. It was just us jamming.” It wasn’t long before Burna Boy was ready to get into the booth. “He kind of just freestyled the song within an hour.” So, as Burna Boy himself puts it, from Twice As Tall you can “Expect Burna Boy to be doing what Burna Boy does: educating and bringing the vibes at the same time.”

The vibes are important, but it’s the education of his listeners that Burna Boy is most passionate about – or the reeducation, the process of unlearning and rediscovering what truly matters, that he believes is the key to unlocking our full potential. Everything we think we know is wrong, he insists. “There's no topic that you've actually been educated on. Not one. None of us were taught or ever given the knowledge that would actually help us. No one was taught any knowledge that actually teaches them about themselves. At the end of the day, everyone was taught someone else's reality.”

The phrase “History is written by the victors” comes to mind, an adage that has been repeated and shared widely as Western society reckons with its pervasive problem with racism and reevaluates its past. As Black Lives Matter protests erupted across the world in response to police brutality in America, Burna Boy has watched from afar. “It is something that brings me so much joy to see, because this is something that couldn't have been accomplished in 20 or 30 years,” he says of the movement and the increased solidarity it has created among black people globally. “It’s all fallen into place in this one year. It brings hope that we're not hopeless people.” It all comes back to the idea of relearning and rebuilding. “Now is the time to rise up, teach and take our rightful place in the world.”

Even though Burna Boy has not been at the protests himself, his music has been, soundtracking resistance in places such as London, where a video of protesters dancing to his track “Ye” went viral. “That is one thing that really gives me a sense of happiness, pride and accomplishment. Seeing things like that motivates me to go on.” It’s no surprise that his music has found a home at demonstrations, himself previously calling it “protest music”. As much as his songs uplift and inspire its listeners to dance with their infectious beats, sun-soaked production and his powerful but comforting vocals, they are also deeply defiant, from their non-conformity to a single genre to his often political lyrics.

“I didn't grow up the same way that 90 per cent of my peers did,” he says. “We've always been rebels, me and my whole family, so it's just kind of who I am.” Burna Boy’s grandfather was Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti’s manager, with his mother later taking on the role, and the artist’s presence in his life has clearly influenced him, from his advocacy for black power to his music. “He's the embodiment of protest music. I learned lessons from him, good and bad, from his experiences and music. There are so many songs [that influenced me]: ‘Army Arrangement’, ‘Coffin For Head Of State’, ‘Buy Africa’. I can't name them in one go.”

At the end of the final track on African Giant, “Spiritual”, you hear a quote from the acceptance speech Burna Boy’s mother gave when she accepted his BET Best International Act award last year on his behalf. “The message from Burna, I believe, would be that every black person should please remember that you were Africans before you became anything else.” He takes this idea a step further when we speak. “If I had my way, every black person that's outside of Africa should be deported back to Africa.” Initially, I’m taken aback. It sounds too similar to the “go back home” rhetoric that black British people are too often subjected to from racists. But his point is less about belonging and more about pooling talents to create an Africa that is as powerful and respected as other continents.

“It’s just so that we can build Africa and get rid of all the animals and the vampires who refuse to die, who are so old, who are just running us into hell and have been for centuries,” he says, clarifying that “the vampires” are Africa’s leaders. “The only way Africa can become the powerhouse that it should be is to get rid of all the African leaders that are here right now, because they have done us no good. The only way that can happen is if you all come back and do what you have to do.” I ask the first, perhaps naive, question that pops into my head: the African diaspora is so vast, how would everyone fit? “Where you are now, you think there's room for you?” Literally and figuratively, maybe he has a point. “Your ancestors are calling you right now. This is the time.”

Burna Boy is a man of few words – “If I had my way, you wouldn't even know what I sound like talking” – but when he speaks, he does so with an air of wisdom that’s beyond his years and, in the moment, can convince you that everything he’s saying must be true. If you do indeed believe that everything he says is true, then his wisdom can be explained by the fact that this is not his first shot at the game of life.

“The purpose of this world is the pursuit of your highest self. I believe that if you don't reach the highest self and you leave this world, you end up coming back,” he says. “Right now, the system is not set up for people to find their higher selves, so what we're going to see is just a bunch of recycled people that have been recycled and recycled and recycled into this world. It's up to you to break all the norms and get rid of everything you think you know and get back to what they call the default setting. You have to empty your cup in order to be able to fill up with the divine.”

How many times has Burna Boy been recycled? “Oh, I think I've been here at least four times, because I just don't see things the way other people see it and, most of the time, it just comes across as so stupid to me. I might come across as arrogant, or not wanting to be understanding, or whatever, but the thing is I am. I do understand and that is why I feel so angry about what I'm seeing. It’s the fact that I understand what I'm seeing, but the people who are going through it don't even understand.”

Whether you believe in reincarnation or not, Burna Boy’s confident approach to life ultimately boils down to experience. The lens through which he sees the world is framed by his global appeal that has allowed him to travel the world. The awards and recognition are nice, sure, but this is what he seems to value about his position in the public eye more than anything else.

“It's been great, man,” he says when asked how he’s adjusted to his increased visibility over the past few years. “It's been overwhelming and it's been emotional at the same time, because if I hadn't become this global I wouldn't have been able to see firsthand the marginalisation, injustice and reality outside of my constituency.” It probably won't surprise many to learn that the place that shocked him the most was America. “I've done about four or five tours. I am someone who has seen more of America than even some Americans. It's unbelievable. It's almost unspeakable the things that go on and just go unnoticed, unpunished and unsaid.”

As an outsider looking in, Burna Boy’s rise up the global charts feels incredibly significant. Here is a Nigerian man, unapologetic about his heritage and beliefs, unwilling to bend to placate Western tastes, and he’s become one of the biggest artists in the world. As Jae5 notes, the African artists who he grew up watching crossover into the Western mainstream would always adopt American accents when doing interviews. Burna Boy does the opposite. Apparently, thanks to a few years spent in London for schooling during his teens, he often speaks with a British accent among friends. “Burna Boy is confident in being an African and it's made people proud,” says Jae5. “Making people feel proud about who they are, I believe, is a huge part of his success.” I wonder if, as the insider looking out, Burna Boy can also sense that he is a symbol of something much greater than record sales and sold-out arenas.

“That's the thing. We're all part of something monumental,” Burna Boy says, matter-of-factly. “We're all part of something larger than all of us. I just know that, unlike a lot of other people who don't know that they are a part of this grand scheme. I was just fortunate enough to realise early that this is what I'm a part of. I'm just not going to fuck around and be gone.” His enlightenment only came three years ago, so don’t worry if you’re not on Burna Boy’s level yet. It will, hopefully, one day click into place. As he says, “Life just wasn't making sense anymore, until it made sense.”

Tulaw- Child of the world download.


Tulaw A.k.a Omo Baba Medicine released his new music titled 'Child of the world'. 
In this fresh jam, he featured Baddest Habbu.
Tulaw guy talked more about himself, stating clearly how he's a child of the world.
The song is a bomb with lyrical vibes and  nice production.
Child of the world is produced by Dj icekid.

Play, Download, Share and also drop your comments about the song.




Messi gives a shocking reaponse regarding himself and ronaldo

 Lionel Messi has brushed aside his fierce rivalry with Cristiano Ronaldo by suggesting that he would pass to him if they played on the same side.

The 33-year-old Barcelona captain has had a heated rivalry with Juventus superstar Ronaldo on the field.

When Messi was asked if he would pass to the 35-year-old Portuguese superstar, he admitted that he would eventually do so.

"I guess so, in the end, yes," he told Spanish newspaper Mundo Deportivo.

Ronaldo's Juventus future has been cast in doubt recently and he has been linked with a move to French champions Paris Saint-Germain.

The former Manchester United and Real Madrid star won Serie A with the Italian side last season, but he watched as Juventus crashed out of the Champions League last week.

Ronaldo, whose Juventus contract expires in 2022, has even been linked with Barcelona in a shocking report.

Credit: PA

Credit: PA

Messi has previously praised Ronaldo on his performances for Juventus and called him a "predatory striker."

The six-time Ballon d'Or winner said: "It's normal that he continues to score, he is a predatory striker, he loves to score, any day he plays he will score.


"He has many good attributes as a forward and at the minimum he converts."

Despite his competitive rivalry with Messi, Ronaldo has brushed aside the idea that the two superstars share any bad blood.

Credit: PA

The five-time Ballon d'Or winner praised their competitive rivalry and admitted that he would love to have dinner with Messi someday.

Ronaldo said ahead of the Champions League draw last August: "We have shared the stage 15 years. I don't know if that's happened before -- the same two guys on the same stage all the time.

"Of course, we have a good relationship. We haven't had dinner together yet, but I hope in the future.

"We had that battle in Spain. I pushed him and he pushed me as well. So it's good to be part of the history of football."

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