society
Grace Nation PHDS – To Advance in Life You need the Hand of God to break Limitations – Dr Chris Okafor
…… It takes consistency to break out of Resistance.. okafor
Life does not give you what you deserve, life gives you what you Battle for. This and more are the case study examined by the Senior Pastor Grace Nation Global, The Generational Prophet Dr Chris Okafor at the midweek Prophetic Healing Deliverance and Solutions service held at the international Headquarters of Grace Nation world-wide in Ojodu Berger Lagos Nigeria.
The Generational Prophet who teaches on the Subject Breaking Satanic Limitations said no matter how dedicated you are in the vineyard if evil horns are directed towards you except you understand the Principles of breaking limitations, the devil will limit you to a specific point.
The Clergyman said you Can only see opportunity if your head is lifted therefore to advance in life you need the Hand of God to break Limitations.
The Generational Prophet also remarks that it takes consistency to break Limitations in your life, you must be Holy to break out of limitations cause ignorance keeps people under limitations..
Explaining on how to pull out of Limitations, The Professor of Prophecy said you must be a dedicated believer of God to pull yourself out of limitations. The Man of God continues that you must have the light of understanding the spirit to break out of limitations.
You must be a Prayer warrior who fast and pray fervently to disappoint the work of the devil thereby breaking limitations.
In conclusion the Generational Prophet said Prayers activate the Transportation of angels to begin work and dismantle the network of limitations in the life of many
The realms of the Prophetic witnessed Miracles, Prophecy, Healings, deliverance, Restoration and Solution to every battle brought before Elohim at the midweek service
society
De Genesix Hotel and Suite upgrade facilities to international standards
De Genesix Hotel and Suite upgrade facilities to international standards
De Genesix Hotel and Suite, a prominent luxury hotel located in the heart of Ogba, precisely at No. 10 Abo Aba Oke-Ira Street, Ogba, Lagos, Nigeria, has rebranded its facility to align with modern best practices in hotel management and hospitality business
Having started its operational business decades ago, the hotel continues to be the preferred outlet for fun enthusiasts and those who appreciate home-away-from-home entertainment
This modern edifice, under the chairmanship of Lagos big boy and successful entrepreneur, Deacon Sunny Ilosobhie, who recently spent over 2 billion to upgrade De-Genexis Hotel and Suite to international standards for customer comfort. During a recent tour of the hotel’s modern facilities, led by General Manager Mr. Gbolahan, the media were shown various amenities, including modern electronic gadgets, new beds, and modern chair setups, new generator sets providing 24 hours of uninterrupted power supply, modern bars, a well-equipped kitchen, a VIP bar, lounge, and several other notable features.The security architecture structure is second to none, providing maximum security for all Customers, with this latest upgrade De Genesix Hotel and Suite remain the best place to be in the city of Ogba, Lagos State if you must get the best of hospitality experiences.

Watch out for part 2 of the latest upgrade in De Genexis Hotel and Suite Abo-Aba Oke-Ira Ogba area of Lagos, Nigeria
society
The Price of Mocking Brilliance: A Nation that Rewards Mediocrity
The Price of Mocking Brilliance: A Nation that Rewards Mediocrity.
(The Nafisa Abdullahi Scandal).
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com
On August 28, 2025, the Federal Government of Nigeria staged what it believed was a moment of national pride: the celebration of a 17-year-old girl, Nafisa Abdullahi from Yobe State, who conquered the globe at the TeenEagle Global English Championship in London. What should have been a defining national moment (a victory of knowledge over adversity) quickly degenerated into a spectacle of ridicule when the government handed her a paltry cash reward of ₦200,000.
Yes, ₦200,000. Not a scholarship. Not a guaranteed pathway to higher education. Not even a well-structured mentorship programme. Just ₦200,000, a sum that evaporates before the ink on a bank teller’s slip dries. This was Nigeria’s GIFT to brilliance.
The Arithmetic of Insult.
To appreciate the depth of this insult, one must juxtapose it with Nigeria’s lavish treatment of sportsmen. Just weeks earlier, victorious athletes returning from global tournaments were rewarded with $100,000 each (over ₦160 million). They were celebrated like royalty, paraded before cameras, and their feats were treated as national salvation. Yet Nafisa, who carried the nation’s banner through intellect, was invited all the way from Damaturu to Abuja only to be mocked with a cheque that barely covered the cost of her journey.
Transportation, accommodation and feeding for such a trip would eat deep into the so-called reward. By the time Nafisa and her parents return to Yobe, what is left of this “NATIONAL HONOUR”? It is not recognition; it is TOKENISM. It is not celebration; it is CONTEMPT.
As Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe once warned, “A man who brings home ant-infested faggots should not complain when visited by lizards.” By offering Nafisa ₦200,000, the government brought home the ant-infested wood of mockery and it should not be surprised that lizards of public outrage came crawling.
Spectacle Over Substance.
This ₦200,000 insult reveals something deeper: a governing philosophy that values spectacle over substance. Sports victories provide cameras, applause and quick political mileage. Intellectual triumphs, by contrast, are quieter, less glamorous and yield no instant political dividends. In the theatre of Nigerian governance, INTELLECT is BORING; MUSCLE is MARKETABLE.
History tells us otherwise. Nations do not rise on the strength of athletes; they rise on the foundation of ideas. Japan rebuilt itself after World War II not by producing football stars but by investing heavily in education and technology. South Korea transformed from poverty to prosperity through engineers, scientists and innovators. Singapore, once dismissed as a swamp, became a global giant by treating education as sacred.
Nigerian leaders know these facts but choose to ignore them. As Nelson Mandela rightly said, “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” Yet, in Nigeria, education is treated like an unwanted burden and mocked with crumbs, underfunded in the budget and constantly sacrificed on the altar of political expediency.
The Economics of Shame.
What does ₦200,000 mean in real terms? In today’s Nigeria, it cannot pay a semester’s tuition at a modest private university. It cannot buy a decent laptop and guarantee a year of reliable internet access. It cannot sponsor participation in another international competition without the help of benevolent sponsors. Meanwhile, ₦160 million (the amount lavished on athletes) can pay for a PhD at Harvard, buy a home in Abuja, and still fund a scholarship foundation for dozens of students.
This is not a call to envy athletes. Sports INSPIRE and UNITE, their role is vital; but the DISPARITY is OBSCENE. When muscle is worth 800 times more than brain, what message does that send to Nigerian children? That the pursuit of intellect is a fool’s errand? That the path of books leads only to mockery?
One angry father captured the national mood on social media: “MY DAUGHTER ASKED ME, DADDY, IS IT BETTER TO BE A FOOTBALLER THAN TO BE INTELLIGENT? I had no answer.” That is the generational damage inflicted by Nigeria’s warped reward system.
The Global Contrast.
Elsewhere, intellectual triumphs are immortalized. Malala Yousafzai of Pakistan, who championed education against all odds, became a Nobel Laureate and a global ambassador for learning. India celebrates its top students with scholarships and mentorship opportunities. Rwanda invests deliberately in the education of its brightest minds as part of its national development strategy.
Nigeria, by contrast, throws billions at political allowances, lavish banquets and football matches while mocking intellectual heroes with what amounts to spare change. As Professor Wole Soyinka once lamented, “You cannot give what you don’t have. If leaders lack respect for knowledge, they cannot nurture it in society.”
Tokenism as Policy.
The tragedy is not just the ₦200,000 itself. It is the message behind it; that Nigeria does not consider INTELLECTUAL EXCELLENCE WORTHY of INVESTMENT. This tokenism is symptomatic of a broader disease. Education budgets are slashed. Teachers are unpaid for months. Pupils sit on bare floors in leaking classrooms. Millions of children are out of school, yet those who manage to shine are mocked with crumbs.
This is not accidental; it is deliberate. A society that does not value education is easier to CONTROL, easier to MANIPULATE and easier to EXPLOIT. Ignorance becomes a tool of governance. Such a society is also doomed to stagnation, trapped in cycles of poverty and mediocrity.
What Could Have Been.
Imagine if Nafisa’s victory had been rewarded with a full scholarship to one of the world’s leading universities. Imagine if the government had established an “INTELLECTUAL HEROES FUND” to support young Nigerians who excel on the global stage. Imagine if the President himself had hosted her at Aso Rock, telling every Nigerian child watching: See what books can do. This is the path to greatness.
Instead, Nafisa was handed ₦200,000; less than what a minister might spend on lunch. This is how nations kill dreams.
The Path Forward.
Nigeria must decide what it values. If it values fleeting applause, it will continue to reward spectacle while starving substance. If it values true progress, it must place education at the centre of national life. This requires more than rhetoric. It requires a philosophy shift:
Scholarships for Global Champions ~ Every student who lifts Nigeria’s name on the global intellectual stage must be guaranteed full scholarships and mentorship opportunities.
Creation of a National Education Heroes Fund ~ To support young minds beyond tokenism.
Reordering of National Priorities ~ Budgetary allocations must reflect the centrality of education, not the luxury of politicians.
Cultural Reorientation ~ We must teach children that intellect is not only valuable but sacred.
As the late Kofi Annan once said, “Knowledge is power. Information is liberating. Education is the premise of progress, in every society, in every family.” Nigeria cannot afford to trivialize this truth.
Nafisa: A Shining Light Amid Darkness.
Yet, even in the face of national mockery, Nafisa Abdullahi remains a symbol of hope. She has proven that Nigerian children, though raised in broken classrooms and neglected by the state, can still shine before the world. Her story must inspire others to know that brilliance is priceless, regardless of governmental tokenism.
The shame belongs not to her but to Nigeria; a country that rewards genius with peanuts while lavishing fortunes on spectacle. As history has shown, nations that mock education collapse under the weight of ignorance, while those that nurture it rise to greatness.
The Price of Mocking Brilliance.
On August 28, 2025, Nigeria mocked brilliance with ₦200,000. It revealed to the world not only its poverty of vision but also its hostility to intellect. Nafisa Abdullahi’s triumph could have been a national rallying point for millions of children. Instead, it became a metaphor for Nigeria’s misplaced values.
One day, history will remember that Nigeria once mocked genius with ₦200,000. By then, perhaps, the nation will understand the true cost of its shame.
society
Nigeria Declares Digital War: 13.5M Accounts Axed in Crackdown on Revenge Porn and Cyberstalking
Nigeria Orders Crackdown on Revenge Porn, Cyberstalking as Millions of Accounts Disappear
The Nigerian Government has unleashed a sweeping purge on Nigeria’s digital space, targeting revenge porn, cyberstalking, deepfakes and manipulated nudes. In the last two weeks alone, global platforms confirmed that more than 13.5 million Nigerian accounts have been suspended and nearly 60 million posts deleted.
According to them, this is not routine moderation but an enforcement of the Code of Practice for Interactive Computer Service Platforms issued by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), which makes it mandatory for platforms like Facebook, X, TikTok, Telegram, Snapchat, Whatsapp, Instagram and others to take down non-consensual sexual content within 48 hours of being flagged. Platforms that fail face sanctions under Nigerian law.
Security agencies say the dragnet was triggered by intelligence pointing to coordinated attempts to leak or fabricate explicit images for blackmail and political sabotage. According to our investigations, this trail is already being followed for prosecution. Every upload, every repost, every comment leaves a footprint. Forensic tools are in place, and officials insist there will be no hiding place.
The warning is backed by precedent. In March, a Nigerian man was extradited to the United States over a sextortion case that involved intimate content. He is now facing charges that carry the weight of decades in prison. Authorities say the same fate awaits anyone in Nigeria who dares to weaponise sexual content.
Revenge porn is not gossip. It is a crime under the Cybercrimes Act and the NITDA Code of Practice. The crackdown has already wiped millions of accounts off the web. The next step will not be suspension. It will be handcuffs and prosecution.
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