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Darey… Finding The Way HomeGuardian Life — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

By Chinonso Ihekire 13 February 2021   |   4:25 am It feels like a breath of fresh air, as you begin to listen. After five long years, Darey Art Alade’s music finally returns to the listening ears of his teeming audience. This 7-tracker extended playlist (EP) is a blend of the musician’s profound storytelling and intricate sound-direction, which have long remained his artistic trademarks. Beginning with Wild West, to Show Me Love (Featuring Teni) and Jojo (featuring Patoranking), Darey paints portraits of love experiences, while he fills the other parts of the playlist – from Mo Oh, to Gone, to Jah Guide Me, and Way Home – with profound notes on appreciating one’s cultural and self-identity. The entire album, mélange of Afro RnB and Pop-soul, sounds exactly as “fresh and vibrant” as the musician describes it. He also baptizes it as a genre called African and Blues (Afro and B). 

Bandits up, herdsmen down and the ugly dance to Rwanda

They are called bandits when they kidnap in Zamfara while the media tags them ‘Fulani herdsmen’ if the victims are from Ekiti or Ebonyi. The same evil but called different names. For decades, farmers in the north have painfully endured the destruction of their farmlands, abduction of their people, kidnapping for ransom and other heinous atrocities in the hands of pastoralists, who I must concede are mostly from the Fulani ethnic stoke at least in recent time. It’s argued that climate change is pushing them to the middle and south to access better nutrition for their cows, which causes the same age-long friction with the locals. It is a relatively new phenomenon for people in the south. Kidnapping though isn’t particularly new because it has been there long before herdsmen mastered the act. It is perpetrated by all groups in the country. As bad as kidnapping is, stoking ethnic tension poses a greater danger of a wider crisis.

Opal Tometi: EndSARS And The Black Struggle

By Njideka Agbo 03 January 2021   |   12:00 pm Opal Tometi Other than the pandemic, movements in support of black liberation were some of the biggest highlights of the year 2020. From the streets of New York to London and even Lagos, people marched in numbers against injustice, racism, police brutality and so many other challenges that have troubled Black people around the world. In light of this, Black Lives Matter (BLM), described as the largest social movement in US history, is the new face of the black struggle. In Nigeria, the EndSARS protests was a representation of this struggle. x The Guardian Life speaks with Opal Tometi, Co-founder, BLM on leadership, the Black race, and reclaiming lost voices.

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