AniOmaa's Posts
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Lol talk of playing to the gallery of a badly written script, even a 2 year old can do better than this So Kanu who is under very tight security custody is issuing all these orders for traditional leaders in Igboland to be killed ? through what medium and magic is he doing all of that? utter stupidity. Kanu is facing a very serious 8 or more count charge on terrorism and treason, and his chances of ever been released if he ever had any hangs in the balance of a pure miracle, so will the same Kanu knowing how severe his case is be so stupid to incite his "boys" to cause more havoc when he's still facing trial for the "crimes" he has yet to be cleared from? Stupidity These so called DSS and government trained ESN hoodlums causing all these mayhem in the East will be exposed soon, no sane ESN or IPOB member will be that daft to ruin the chances of their leader from ever coming out of prison by committing crimes that will nail his fate if traced to them... it's plainly illogical and defies common sense. So it's one of two things: (1). These are government sponsored agents who are playing a script, the plan is simple... cause mayhem in the East, kill top leaders/figures across the South East, unleash as much violence and unrest as possible... when "caught" you have to claim you're ESN. That way Kanu will never have a fair chance of a untainted trial in court. (2). These animals committing all these crimes are actually ESN members who have derailed from the struggle, have been bribed and compromised, or are disenfranchised splinter groups who have a completely different objective from what the real ESN was created for (which was to protect our ancestral lands from the fulani terrorists scourge plaguing the South). Kanu may end up free or might spend the rest of his life in prison... or he might even be killed by the government eventually... but one thing is certain, the truth must surely prevail eventually and the East will never succumb to the evil machinations of those that want our downfall by all means possible... we survived the worst in 1967-70...we shall more than survive this one. |
I don't care if this news is from 1900,but 18 human skulls?? What in the world will someone be doing with 18 skulls? Jesu!!! |
paramakina202:Loads of baseless tripe and balderdash, Have you retained this same moral compass energy when hundreds if not more of your people have been butchered and decapitated across the SW region in countless ritual killings? the facts and figures are there incase you want to mudsling! you come from a region already known to rank high on the index of ritualistic killings per capita in Nigeria... so you should be the LEAST person to talk about cannibalism that happened in just one tiny local government area of Imo state (thankfully the animals responsible for such despicable acts have been caught), when the worst of such has happened across all SW states...Soka forest in Ibadan is there for you to google incase you developed selective amnesia. |
The Nigerian army, DSS, Police, Civil defence and even the Governor of Imo state did not blame the atrocities on IPOB/ESN, they simply called the perpetrators "criminals"... Yet the hungry online Nairaland FBI, CiA and KGB agents who are yet to investigate the reason why they are miserable and poor in life have already blamed ESN for the crime. Nigerians are really funny people walahi ![]() |
It's hard to make a case for IPOB/ESN cause of how tact-less they are by unwittingly putting themselves in the line of a ruthless media fire that tend to oversensitize every crime in the East by alluding itto IPOB... but anyone with half a brain will know that Orsu cannibalism nonsense wasn't the handwork of ESN... even the DSS and security agencies that are quick to rope ESN to every crime in the East didn't mention ESN in all their public statements on the perpetrators of the sickening crime... I spoke to several people who come from that community and they told me many of those animals that were terrorizing the community weren't even indigenes! |
Our Efik and Ibibio brothers have always stood with the Igbos in the struggle, even though I want a purely Igbo nation, I can trust the AkwaCross nation to be good neighbors to us and form a solid trading partnership. |
We hear ONLY one report of "cannibalism" out of many calendar years in just one LGA in Imo state (and we're not even sure if the criminals behind such despicable acts are indigenes or not) yet Yaribaas want to compare that to many and countless reports of unending ritual killings going on in the SW EVERY month/per year? ... can the cannibalism in Orsu local government area top the infamous Soka forest cannibalism? ![]() |
I dey fear to yab my Coneheaded brothers on the ritual thing cause of the cannibalism nonsense in Imo state, make I maintain my lane for now ![]() |
Very graphic, Yaribaas and Edo people una well done ooo... Keep disgracing us ![]() https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViTQ7N7iUQ0 |
Sufferingboy:Please provide a source backed by substantial historical information that shows the family of the Asagba of Asaba are from Benin? I think you're confusing the heavy Benin influence on much of the Western Igbo subgroups for ancestry, Benin warriors raided lots of Igbo communities in protracted efforts to annex them under the authority of the Oba, of course some parts of these areas like Ika areas of today fell to Benin annexation and as a result had more direct influences from the Benins... the parts of Enuani were I come from are documented to have Nri ancestry and not Benin, we also had some Benin influence because the Benin empire at the time had very strong political footholds in most parts of the South. |
Sufferingboy:Another load of gibberish, On the Ned Nwoko part, this is a link to an interview he did with BBC Igbo and he strongly embraced his Igbo roots. The Asagba of Asaba has never denied his Igboness as well so you have absolutely no point. https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://m.facebook.com/Igbo-di-%25E1%25BB%25A4s%25E1%25BB%258D-405264543591962/videos/prince-ned-nwoko-on-his-beliefs-in-igbo-culture-as-it-is-and-not-as-its-been-dil/1009861589828582/&ved=2ahUKEwiQstOOjOL0AhVFJTQIHW3OB9gQwqsBegQIBBAE&usg=AOvVaw25R6hSvRIcT98vgou1HrUf |
Sufferingboy:If you like have Mandarin, Russian and German ancestors that one be una shalanga... My one stake here is that as much as we're all Anioma, our bearings and sociocultural orientations run very parallel to each other...it's just important these distinctions are established so that when your Ika part say Anioma are not Igbos, people outside will understand what part of Anioma you're talking about... so it's very important you speak ONLY for your Ika/Ukwuani axis... Enuani have already made clear whom we are as a people. |
[s] Sufferingboy:[/s] Utter gibberish, LMAOOOO I'm now an Abakeleke man because I refused to tow the path of your profound ignominy? what exactly is your grouse? what bones are you trying to pick here? you're deeply pained that I just like majority of my Enuani people refused to deny our Igboness? listen here you piece of human garbage, I don't have to prove my identity to you, many people on here who know me off Nairaland and follow me on Twitter and Facebook know I'm a very avid promoter of Anioma culture, especially my Enuani nation... so your rants and rhetorical attempts at grandstanding are irrelevant to me. Like I earlier stated, if you want to prove you're not Igbo... then stop answering Igbo names for starters, ditch your Igbo customs and traditions, stop observing the Igbo 4 market days (Orie, Nkwo, Afor, Eke)... then go organize a public meeting with all your leaders to find ways to evolve a completely new proto-Ika language that has no hint of Igbo dialectical influence in it...till then you can only fool yourselves! even amongst yourselves there is still confusion... It's a myriad of confusion worse than the biblical tower of babel... some of you claim they are Agbor and not Ika, some claim they are Igbos, some claim Benin, some just want to be referred to as Ika... like can't you seen how much of a circus you've reduced yourselves to? Enuani wants no part of that confusion, so we've already made clear from the onset that we know our heritage history and the undiluted equanimity of our identities... We're PROUDLY IGBOS, if that assertion is what is making you CRY, then I have more buckets for you to fill up ![]() |
Sufferingboy:Listen, I'm from Anioma, Ibusa and of the Enuani nomenclature, and I'm proudly and unapologetically IGBO to the core of my bones, and every placelets of my blood courses with IGBO. If you Ika people want to malign the Igbos on the basis of your insistence of not been Igbos, that is fine... but please don't drag the Enuani nation into your identity crisis madness, so just to be categorically clear here: Enuani are proudly IGBOS, we've never denied our Igboness. Then the Ika/Ukwuani axis of Anioma are partly Igbos, others claim Benin ancestry, while the rest want to maintain a purely distinct identity as just Ika. |
I saw lots of them armed with military assault weapons in Imo state, they were all dressed in black while doing joint patrol with soldiers this morning at Orsu. They were in their operational hilux vans marked with Ebubeagu symbols on the vehicles, it appeared they had successfully raided and apprehended so many kidnappers unleashing mayhem along the neighboring communities bordering Imo and Anambra... some abducted monarchs were also rescued. |
Yaribaas graduated from mining heads to harvesting human private parts... If you ask me, At least they are making progress ![]() |
Naija on the map
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Meet the student bringing Black illustrations to the medical field Chidiebere Ibe said he hopes his creations will help change the field of medical illustration, which is predominately white and male. Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News. Chidiebere Ibe started drawing medical illustrations featuring Black bodies about a year ago. "I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature,” he told NBC News. Have you ever seen a medical illustration featuring a Black body? Social media users admitted they hadn’t when an image of a Black fetus in a Black woman’s womb went viral this month. Chidiebere Ibe, 25, is behind the image. The Nigerian medical student, who will enter Kyiv Medical University in Ukraine next month, describes himself as a self-taught medical illustrator. He said he’s spent at least a year learning to draw anatomy, focusing on Black skin every step of the way. “I wasn’t expecting it to go viral,” Ibe, an aspiring pediatric neurosurgeon, said of the image in an interview. “I was just sticking up for what I believe in, advocating for equality in health through medical illustrations. I made a deliberate action to constantly advocate that there be inclusion of Black people in medical literature.” He began publishing the images on social media, showing conditions like empyema thoracis and seborrheic eczema on Black skin. Many of the images show skin conditions prevalent with Black people, combating a misrepresentation that often leads to misdiagnosis. The fetus illustration went viral after a Twitter user shared the photo, writing, “I’ve literally never seen a black foetus illustrated, ever.” The post was retweeted more than 50,000 times, and the illustration garnered more than 88,000 “likes” on Instagram and even made its way to TikTok. Ibe drew praise from medical professionals far and wide. “Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people. On my LinkedIn, on my Twitter, on my Instagram, I read the comments and they really touched me. I was crying,” Ibe said. “It was amazing to see how good people felt about it. People could see themselves in the drawing.” “Little did I understand what the drawing meant to a lot of people," said illustrator Chidiebere Ibe.Chidiebere Ibe Ibe said he became interested in medical illustrations after graduating with an undergraduate degree in chemistry from the University of Uyo in Nigeria and preparing to enter medical school. Ibe, who leads creative design at the Association of Future African Neurosurgeons, was working under Dr. Ulrick Sidney Kanmounye at the association to learn anatomy drawing when, he said, he came to a realization: “The drawings I saw aren’t in Black skin.” This launched him into studying medical illustration and focusing on Black skin. A little over a year later, Ibe said, the viral images have landed him an offer to pursue a PhD at a New York university after medical school. Anatomy drawings have been around for thousands of years, but medical illustration was established as a profession in the United States in the late 19th century, according to the Association of Medical Illustrators (AMI). The lack of Black representation in medical journals and textbooks is no secret, though. A January study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin. Ni-ka Ford, the chair of AMI's diversity committee, said this is an extension of medical racism. Just 4.5 percent of images in general medicine textbooks show dark skin, according to researchers at the University of Pennsylvania.Chidiebere Ibe “The field is so closely connected to medicine and health care, which have a lot of roots in systemic racism. So that’s a big part of it,” Ford said. “Medical illustrations have historically have always been very predominately white and male centered. … A lot of textbooks have already been published and are already in the rounds around the world and they are very exclusionary in the visual content of people of different backgrounds.” The few Black medical illustrators in the predominately white field have been working to right the injustice, Ford said. Earlier this year, she and the association’s diversity team launched the #AMIDiversity campaign, urging medical illustrators everywhere to post their work of “nonwhite bodies.” Ford said the association plans to hold the campaign annually. The team is also working on efforts to get more Black people into the field. Chidiebere Ibe Ford, who has been a practicing medical illustrator for four years, said diverse medical illustrators are imperative for making diagnoses. She described medical illustrations as “visual education material” that play a major role in training medical professionals. “It literally affects patient health at the end of the day,” she said. She added that diverse medical illustrations promote empathy in doctor-patient relationships and, in turn, improve patient care. When patients see reflective medical illustrations in their doctor’s office, it promotes trust and honest communication that are often vital in medical care, Ford said. There are a lot of positive implications for both the medical field and the patient when illustrations reflect different skin types, Ford added. And Ibe agreed. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/meet-student-bringing-black-illustrations-medical-field-rcna8277?cid=sm_npd_nn_tw_ma
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I love IB!
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KoshCAD:Lie lie, we will welcome him with a dance troupe of atilogwu and Ogene singers and dancers, after which he will be led to an exotic mansion where a sumptuously prepared meal of pounded yam and bitter leaf soup, goat meat and palm wine to wash it all down will be waiting for him ![]() |
At least they didn't mine his skull and sell it for less than regular price of Yaribaa heads (N5K-20k)... The white boy can be grateful to God that he came back safely from the land of the skull miners ![]() |
Brimstone77:Where have you been? Afonja skulls now go for such cheap amounts that they even do free bonanza to encourage their fellow afonja customers to patronize them, with just N25k you can buy the skull of a fully grown Afonja male... some even go for as low as N5K, skull mining is now a booming business in the SW. |

