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Thumbs up to the Nigerian boys who are making the country proud abroad.

These 10-year old Nigerian talented twins, making waves in the United Kingdom. The twins; Hills and Wills Nwokedi are the authors of Dominik’s Diaries (Grandma: Desperate Measures), a book stylishly written in order to inspire the children.

According to reports, the twins who are now popular because of their book – have met top shots in the UK…

Hills and Wills were born in Nigeria and brought to UK at their infant age of 2. They are currently in Primary year 6 and have great passion for writing and reading with a desire to become authors. They also have a book club for Children to join and freely interact with each other and exchange stories.

The talented boys are also students of green belt karate, Bushido Shotokan Karate Club Dojo. They also belong to the Anfield community band and Let’s Play Group Notre dame College in Liverpool were they play Clarinet. They also play for their school’s football team and league and also members of the altar boys in their Church.

Source: nationalhelms

See more images after the cuts...








Tomisin Jasmin Ogunnubi, a 12 year old student of Vivian Fowler Memorial College Oregun, Lagos; has just developed a fully functional android application in Nigeria.

It has not been the most positive of times in Nigeria considering the current economic climate but every now and then a story will pop up and lift the spirits of the country. Tomisin Ogunnubi from Lagos has provided such a story for her nation in Answers Africa.

The 12-year-old girl from Lagos has developed an app to solve a problem which she had noticed in her community. Tomisin finished up the development of her Android mobile tracking app, My Location, just a few weeks ago.

The motivation behind the app was to help lost children find their way back home.

How it was developed:

Tomision developed her app under the guidence of an Information and Communications Technology partnership, between her school, Vivian Fowler Memorial College for Girls, and New Horizons Computer Learning Center. Here, Tomision was able to learn the necessary skills and knowledge needed to develop her app.

How it works:

The “current location”setting on the app enables the child to see exactly where they are, as well as highlighting the neighboring streets around them. The other main functionality of the app will allow the child to save a location such as their house or school and it will direct them to their desired location.

The My Locator App also features a button, which when pressed will alert the Lagos State Emergency Services. The app will call the services as well as show the child’s location so that they can be helped.

The app is available for free download in Lagos, Nigeria.

Nigerian girl-child education advocate and filmmaker Zuriel Oduwole spoke alongside Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Ndaba Mandela at an event organised by one of France’s largest social development NGO’s Printemps Solidaire.

The event brought more than 500,000 youths to the Champs Elysees, in celebrating the power of youths in changing the perception of social issues across the globe.

Zuriel shared her experiences as head of Dream Up, Speak Up, Stand Up (DUSUSU) Foundation. She spoke about balancing being a youth, with her interests such as Girl Education advocacy and Filmmaking. Ndaba Mandela, the Grandson of the South African icon Nelson Mandela and head of Africa Rising Foundation, spoke about the importance of a good Legacy, having come from one himself – Mandela.

Melinda Gates commended Zuriel for finding her passion early, and working to make a difference in the lives of girls across the globe. Zuriel shared her idea of building an e-school platform for girls in the rural parts of Africa.





Nnamdi Ezeigbo is the founder and CEO of SLOT systems limited, and also the brain behind TECNO and INFINIX, the fastest selling phone brands in Nigeria. Many people are not even aware that these popular phone brands are the brainchild of a fellow Nigerian. His success story is a very remarkable one.

Nnamdi Ezeigbo studied Electrical Electronics Engineering at the Yaba College of Technology in 1988, and got a Higher National Diploma (HND), before serving his country, Nigeria, during his National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) year at Guinness Nigeria PLC, in 1996.

After completing his youth service year, Nnamdi Ezeigbo tried to no avail to secure a job with a company in Nigeria. With no promising signs of any potential employment, he went on to work as an apprentice learning how to repair computers. After which he launched out on his own to repair computers for individuals. Since he didn’t have any cash at the time, he had to squat with a friend of his at Ikeja, who owned a book store. His customer base grew, largely because of his honesty and the premium he placed on customer service.

The mutual trust and good relationship with his customers, was what gave him his first break in business. One day, an old customer he knew from his days as an apprentice, came to his little shop to see him. He told him he would love him to continue fixing his computers, but would prefer he operated from a larger and more serene environment. To help him out, the customer brought some printers for Nnamdi to sell, from which he used the proceeds to setup a new shop for himself. He paid for the store at a then price of 180,000 Naira (He later bought that same store many years later for 100 million Naira).



From his new store, he began to sell computers. As his business grew, a lot of customers started to both demand for Slot stores in areas close to their vicinities, and to ask if they sold mobile phones. With a keen eye to spot opportunity when it presents itself, Nnamdi Ezeigbo immediately expanded his business to also cover the sale of mobile phones.With no real knowledge on how to manage a growing business, Nnamdi decided to enrol for an MBA program at the prestigious Lagos Business School. He also began to attend many workshops on entrepreneurship, which helped to sharpen his business acumen and develop his legendary entrepreneurial prowess.

During this process, he and his team decided to take a 5 year route to build a strong reputation for their brand. By the time the projection had elapsed, the Slot brand name was the most reputable mobile phone retailer in the whole country.



The rise of telecommunication networks created many opportunities in the Nigerian market. Their poor services caused many Nigerians to purchase more than one mobile phone, so they could try a different network when the other was bad. Nnamdi realised this problem early on, and approached Nokia in a bid to convince them to manufacture dual sim phones for Nigerians, so they would carry only one mobile phone at a time instead of two. They refused to listen because, seeing people carry more of their phones meant more phone sales for them.

According to his interview with Nairametrics, Nnamdi said;
“So I went to China and got a guy who had worked with a company called Bird then. Bird was into phones but they got choked and lost market share. I met with the guy and asked the guy to let us do something. I came with that name and I registered it here and brought the guy to Nigeria. And that was the high point of our business. We came together and I designed the first Tecno phone, Tecno T101. We started it but the market did not accept it and we also had problem with the dual SIM not working together and we had to make corrections and we came with Tecno 201 and that was a bit accepted by the market. But we were basically giving marketers on credit to sell the phones and then pay us later. And I was funding it all alone. Since I was funding it alone, we were finding it difficult to get the right quantity to sell until the market started accepting us. What I now did was to make them pay in advance, I mean the dealers. So we started using their money to order the products. This was around 2007. 

The introduction of Tecno brand was the turning point of our business. Like I said, Tecno is my baby and we kept improving. I knew a day would come when the middle class would accept Tecno. Initially, it was a phone for low income people but based on improvement and upping our game, the middle class had to accept it and when the economy went down in 2008 that helped Tecno to move to the top. Since purchasing power had dropped, they had to go for something that have same capabilities but cheaper. So with N15,000, you could buy a Smartphone and thank God for 3G network. The advent of 3G network actually helped Tecno to move up. So students who could not afford to buy phones in the range of N30,000 could buy one for N15,000 and enjoy features of Smartphone like Facebook, Twitter, Whatsapp and so on.”

Today, Nnamdi Ezeigbo is a phenomenal success story in Nigeria and indeed Africa. From a humble repair man, he has built a multi-million dollar company and one of the most recognizable brand in Nigeria.

There are many lessons in this story.
Pay attention to your business no matter how small it is today, it can be the seed of a global company tomorrow.
Integrity in business is extremely important, it will open doors for you, and speak for you, even when you are not present.

When you see opportunities, grab it and run with it.
Keep improving your products and services every day. Nnamdi kept improving Tecno steadily until it became an accepted brand in Nigeria.

Most importantly, the greatest investment you will make is an investment in yourself. As a business man, if you can afford a business school, enroll.

Don’t waste your time crying over the economy of the nation, there is nothing you can do about it, but there is a lot you can do about your own personal economy.
Improve yourself and your personal economy will improve. At least, let us all start from somewhere.


Culled from theartofade.com


This is indeed a great talent isn't it? What kind of help do you think he needs Africans??



At 27, he is already the CEO of two companies in Nigeria worth millions of naira. His clothing line, Owambe Clothings, is a well-known brand that promotes both indigenous African styles and western styles. 

After graduating from the university, Ola-Abraham Emmanuel, decided to go into fashion designing after picking interest in the business during the mandatory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) and has not looked back. He has styled personalities like former Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan, the current Governor of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amosun, and many others. He has about 18 full time staff in his workforce.

His second company is agriculture-based. The young entrepreneur has acquired large acres of land in the South western part of the country, which he subsidises to youths and adults who want to go into farming. He does not only sell the land to would-be farmers, he also has a team that helps the individuals with the farming; all they need to do is acquire the land and his team will do the farming,

In a chat with Olamide Babatunde, he speaks of his engagement in both industries.

Excerpt:

Meeting the man
My name is Ola-Abraham Emmanuel, a 27-year-old Nigerian and I am the CEO of Owambe Clothings. I am one of the few entrepreneurs who changed the face of fashion and agriculture in Nigeria. I am a trained journalist but found love in agriculture at childhood and fashion designing from NYSC orientation camp.

After my NYSC, I established my company, Owambe Clothings, with 18 employees. In less than a year, the company has sewn over 3,000 Nigerian attires. I also design clothes for former President Goodluck Jonathan, Governor Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State, top celebrities, civil servants and government officials. Three years ago, I organised Africa’s largest fashion show, a show where I featured 112 models from Nigeria, Togo, Benin Republic and Ghana to exhibit my designs in one show and one event. That show had more than 800 guests in attendance, and the Governor of Ogun State was represented.

I also initiated an agriculture initiative called “Own a Hectare with 80k.” I have  encouraged over 50 young Nigerians to go into farming by providing lands at affordable rate and instalment  payments.

Entrepreneurship rather than journalism
The media communicates to the people in a bid to change their perceptions. Fashion is the same. Our designs change trends, speak to people’s attention, affection and create attraction or repulsion. My love for fashion is to change the way we see the world and what we wear. I want Nigerians to wear Nigeria Monday to Friday. Therefore, in my fashion, I’m still doing my media work, which is agenda setting. So, as you can see, it is a different field but the same objective.

Start-up capital
I had initially approached one of the Federal Government’s SME funds in 2011 but along the line it stopped. Then I raised money with the most important currency in the world. Integrity! Because I possess a tangible amount of integrity I could get sufficient funds from friends, families and even enemies.

Dealing with omo-nile (land grabbers)
I think the omo-nile issue is worse in Lagos. This is because there are a lot of people and limited land. In other places, it is not like that. Some of our lands are bought from government; some are bought from people who inherited it. We meet them, tell them our passion and make them believe and buy into it, we negotiate and pay. And about the fundraising, before I bought lands, my other business had raised a reasonable amount of money then I also met with friends and families again. Remember, I have never disappointed them. So it was easy for them to part with their money too. Some gave their money as investors, others as loan. Whichever way, we are getting close to our dream.

Response to agric project, especially the youth
The Nigerian youth needs help. Tell them to work, they say no job. Give them job they say it is too difficult and time consuming. 80 per cent of the people who have bought into this idea are adults. The young constitutes only about 20 per cent. They are not ready to do anything. They want quick and fast money. Nothing comes easy. Not even dying.

Managing the workforce
I don’t interact personally with all of them and some of them are not in Lagos. We only get to interact twice in a year at our end of year party and sales/or any other event. To lead them, each department has its head and each head reports to me directly. They all have tasks they execute. From my experience, I learnt that to best deal with staff, you must motivate them, threaten them and also punish them. So that is what I do when necessary.

Since graduation, have you ever worked for anyone?
Since graduation I have not worked for anyone.

Family/business
Marriage has changed my work routine because it has made it better. Before now, it was almost like I live and work in the office because most of the time, I sleep in the office and work round the clock. Getting married made it more effective. I get more organised, get home to think more and effectively with my partner. Then come to work the following day to effect the plans and the thought we had. Aside that, I write a lot and my wife also helps me with the editing. She does that better than I do.


Meet 22year old Oyindamola Omotuyi who is set to convocate on the 24th of january as the Best graduating student for the 2015/2016 session from the department of Systems Engineering with a perfect cgpa of 5.0.



An SS3 art student of Community Staff Schools Asokoro told newsmen that he invented the motorcycle to ease the mode of transportation in Nigeria and Africa at large.

He stated that he has been riding the prototype as a mode of transportation from his house to the school for more than three months without any problems.

His words: “I like things that involve mechanical, assemble and dissemble. This made me perceived I can do something different to better the means for transportation.

“My motor-bike has features that are partly bicycle and partly motorcycle,’’ he said.

On his part, the principal of the school, Sa’idu Ahmed said that it was a thing of joy for such one of the art students to use his talent for such a discovery. “I have gone to his house to encourage him and he later told me that he had finished the project".


Nigerian Senior Secondary School student, Miss Chinemenma Emma-Ugoji, has emerged the first female President of the General Assembly of Nigerian International Secondary Schools Model United Nations (NISSMUN).

The student of Premier Academy, Lugbe in Abuja, was elected at the  won the 12th edition of NISSMUN annual conference.

The conference held at the International Conference Centre in Abuja from Oct. 22nd to Oct. 26th, 2016.

Ten candidates contested for the position and close to 1,000 students drawn from International Schools across the country attended the conference.

The conference which had the theme: “Engaging Youths in Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)’’ was organized by the Nigerian Model United Nations Society which has been conducting NISSMUN conferences since 2005.

Chinemenma said: “I wanted to be the first girl to occupy the position and I want to play a leading role in efforts to prove that young people have something to offer in terms of achieving the SDGs.’’

Contesting for the position was interesting because we were asked general questions about the UN, its General Assembly and the organization’s rules and procedures before we were asked to present individual manifesto.

Chinemenma who represented Belgium in the International Maritime Organization (IMO) committee at the conference, said that the experience she gathered during deliberations has given her the hunch to study Maritime Law in the University.

She added that her target is to study at the American University of Nigeria AUN.

She said that the Leadership training conducted during the conference has emboldened her to take on issues of SDGs with more confidence.

“ I even walked bare feet while presenting my manifesto because I had to remove my high heel shoes which were a bit discomforting. This is one manifestation of confidence,’’ she said.

“Bringing schools from all over Nigeria to come together to understand the ways of the UN in making decisions, especially the 17 SDGs is so rewarding.


The 36 committees and the designation of delegates as representative of member countries of the UN brought out the best in them,’’ she said.

On how young people could contribute to the achievement of the SGDs, she said that young people have ideas on what is peculiar to their generation and they can talk about those issues and proffer solutions to their problems.

She reasoned that since the SDGs were plan to transform the world into a better place, young people are critical in taking decisions on the goals since they are the ultimate beneficiaries.



Ambassador Matthew Adeyemi Adeniyi has emerged the substantive President-General of the World Youth Organization, an affiliate of the United Nations. Adeniyi was elected and inaugurated on Saturday in New Delhi, India as the first elected President-General of the WYO after a keenly contested election.

He defeated contestants from eight countries.
These are US, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Yemen, Palestine, Albania, Sudan and Nepal. According to Davies Johnson from Austria, the Chairman of the Electoral Committee, Adeniyi polled 1,679 votes to defeat his closest rival, Jack Adraka of the United States, who scored 511 votes. Adeniyi, who was proclaimed as an ambassador in 2013 at the United Nations Headquarters, New York, USA, clinched the coveted seat in a clean win at te venue of the event in Vigyan Bhawan.

Prior to the election and inauguration of the Ambassador Adeniyi-led executive, which will run the affairs of the world youth body for the next four years, the WYO was run by a transition committee headed by Max Goodwin Kieran from Romford, the United Kingdom. Other executive members who would steer the ship of the organization with Ambassador Adeniyi for the next four years are Karla Sugey Rodriguez (Mexico), Secretary General; Claire Pace (Malta), Treasurer; and Vice Presidents Devjyoti Dutya (North America), Rochana Richardson (Europe), Emmah Musenyah (Africa), Fursan Mohammed (Asia), Junior Menezes (South America), Elvana Shala (Australia).

All other countries of the world are represented at the executive committee level. Adeniyi, who hails from Ogbomoso, Oyo State, has been involved in youth projects and empowerment activities since his days as a student of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso and The Western University of Ontario, Canada. Notable among the achievements of Adeniyi as a youth leader and diplomat are the establishment of the global Youth Trust Funds and the passage of Youth Empowerment Schemes Bill into law when he was the President of the United Nations Global Youths and the Convener of the Confederation of the United Nations Youth during the tenure of Ban Ki-Moon, the immediate past Secretary-General of the United Nations.

Addressing the delegates at the assembly, Adeniyi said he would uphold the tenets of the WYO and work towards the achievement of the main objectives of the biggest global youth organization, which was primarily founded for the welfare of youths across the globe and promotion of awareness on the importance of participation in the leadership process of every nation of the world.

Speaking further, Ambassador Adeniyi stated that he, with his other executive members, would work towards the WYO’s goals using the organisation’s ideology of friendship and unity. World leaders and dignitaries at the event included Vice President of India, Mohammed Hmid Ansariof; Kofi Annan, former Secretary-General of the United Nations; India’s Minister of External Affairs, Somanahalli Mallaiah Krishna; Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports, Ajay Maken; National Security Adviser, Shivshankar Menon; Ambassador Almad Alhendawi, Special Envoy on Youth Affairs to the United Nation’s Secretary-General; Archbishop Desmond Tutu; and Ministers of Youth Affairs across the world.


In recent years, South Africa's rich choral tradition has produced a wave of talented opera singers who are making their mark on the world stage. Soprano Pretty Yende wowed opera enthusiasts in 2013, when she debuted at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, while bass-baritone Musa Ngqungwana will open next year's Glimmerglass Festival as Porgy in the American classic, "Porgy and Bess."

Now, South Africa is pinning its hopes on another rising opera star — 25-year-old Noluvuyiso Mpofu.

I meet up with Mpofu at the South African College of Music at the University of Cape Town. She’s been studying here for a few years, but her journey began in a township in the coastal city of Port Elizabeth, a day’s drive east of here.

“We grew up in the same house — my mom, my granny, my cousins, my aunt,” says Mpofu.

She's from the region of Eastern Cape, which has been called the "vocal breadbasket" of South Africa.

Mpofu joined a choir when she was in primary school, but she had never heard opera performed until attending a singing competition well into high school.

“I remember listening to this girl singing and being fascinated by the language, the costumes, the music itself," she says. "It just mesmerized me, and I thought, ‘You know what, this is what I want to do. I’m going to sing.’"

Mpofu went to her local library to find out more about this beautiful but somewhat alien-sounding art form. She entered competitions, scooping up the second prize in a national school competition. Then, she auditioned for a coveted spot in the Opera School at the University of Cape Town. Voice coach Patrick Tikolo was blown away by her performance.

“There’s that kind of glowing femininity in her singing," he says. "You just cannot ignore that kind of a voice. I just knew this voice will actually go places.”

The young opera talent was admitted to the university. But she never showed up. Tikolo couldn’t find her name on the list. “I kept wondering what could be happening. I started calling her,” he remembers.

Mpofu said she hadn’t received the acceptance letter. Tikolo persuaded her to come straight away.

“Try and get ready to come. Talk to your mum. Organize yourself. You need to come to Cape Town," he urged her at the time.

When Mpofu finally got to the opera school, she mailed DVDs of her student performances to her mother.

“She was amazed when she watched me. She would brag about me and take the DVDs to everyone in our street. She was very proud," Mpofu says.

But early into her time as a university student, Mpofu's mother died. While miles away and grieving, she had to step up to help provide for her little brothers, as well.

“My younger brothers were 2 and 5 years old when my mom passed on ... and after that, I said, 'OK, you know what, you are the one who is going to support your family now. So just pull up your socks ... just push yourself ...' and that’s what I’ve been doing ever since.”

Last year, she came in third place in the prestigious international Operalia competition hosted by Plácido Domingo in London. Then, this summer, the International Hans Gabor Belvedere Singing Competition, the "world cup" of opera, came to Cape Town.

But things weren’t looking auspicious for Mpofu. A bout of flu nearly knocked her out of the competition. And then, two days before the performance, a man mugged her as she walked home from the theater.

“He stood in front of me and took out a knife," she says. "And then he said, 'Give me your phone, give me your money, give me everything.’ I told myself to stay calm, because the previous day someone had got stabbed in the same vicinity. I was like, 'Stay calm, give him what he wants.' But when I got home, I cried. I was shocked.”

But the incident didn't stop her. On the day of the opening rounds, Mpofu put her nerves aside and plunged into the Gaetano Donizetti aria she had chosen.

“It’s the life of an artist," she says. "The show must go on. You have no time to just cry ... maybe a few seconds of crying, and then you’re back on your game.”

And she was. Once again, Mpofu made it to the finals. She was delighted when the judging panel asked her to sing an aria from one of her favorite operas, Giuseppe Verdi’s "La Traviata."

“When she told me this aria was selected for her, I said, ‘You know what, it’s God’s call,'" says Tikolo. He basked in her performance.

“She was like an angel on that stage. She was sparkling. She sang with such poise, and it was no wonder that people loved her so much. It said it all to me that ‘Yes, yes. This is where she is supposed to be.'"

Mpofu won the second prize overall, the audience prize and was the best South African singer in the competition. She brought the house down. It also made her more determined than ever to pursue her dream.

“My dream is to sing all over the world," she says. "Just to share what I have with people. This is definitely my future. This is definitely what I want to do, and I do not imagine myself doing anything else.”

Mpofu's future looks promising. But competition is tough. For now, she’s still waiting for that big-time call to the international stage.


Just few days ago the amazing story of Dike Onyebuchi Raphael and his darling bride Blessing Chinwe Akubuilo broke the internet.

What is more fascinating is that both love birds are bloggers from Nigeria.

Dike who met his beautiful Blessing last year, August 15th, according to his facebook timeline, owns the fast rising thereportersng.com while Blessing is the owner of nuellagist.com.

You can just see the love in both their faces. Africa is so proud to have this young enteprising couple. They are set to tie the knot on Nov. 5th in Anambra state, Nigeria.

When you have a blogger couple, well, i thinkl Africans should expect more Mark Zuckerberg from this amazing couple.


Africafuturestars.com wishes you both a successful marital life as you both continue to lift and promote the Africa spirit with your ideas and innovations.


See more images below...






Just few days ago the amazing story of Dike Onyebuchi Raphael and his darling bride Blessing Chinwe Akubuilo broke the internet.

What is more fascinating is that both love birds are bloggers from Nigeria.

Dike who met his beautiful Blessing last year, August 15th, according to his facebook timeline, owns the fast rising thereportersng.com while Blessing is the owner of nuellagist.com.

You can just see the love in both their faces. Africa is so proud to have this young enteprising couple. They are set to tie the knot on Nov. 5th in Anambra state, Nigeria.

When you have a blogger couple, well, i thinkl Africans should expect more Mark Zuckerberg from this amazing couple.


Africafuturestars.com wishes you both a successful marital life as you both continue to lift and promote the Africa spirit with your ideas and innovations.


See more images below...







NIGERIA - De Edge Crew, an award winning youth-oriented group based in Awka, Nigeria, specialized in identifying, developing and empowering the young unemployed citizens of Africa through entertainment using PAVE (Patriotism, Advocacy, Volunteering and Empowerment) approach is receiving new members for the year 2016.

If you have any talent or skill, here's your opportunity to meet like minds, build on your capacity and get exposed to higher pedestrian.

Join Now... Add 0808 321 9304 on WhatsApp to be added into the group.

NB: Admittance of New Members ends by October 28, 2016. Limited Spaces Available!

Edge Crew ... Pave Your Way!


Africans are now alive, alive to their innate capabilities. 

A young Nigerian from Bida in Niger State, recently construct a 'convertible' car, which he drove from Bida to Abuja, a distance of about 200km.

Surprisingly, the car engine was constructed using a mini generator set popularly known as 'i pass my neigbour'.

Africa future stars is proud to associate itself with Africans like this. It is an indication that Africa is now ripe and we are taking over.

See more images...








A Nigerian orphan named Islamiyat Oluwatoyin Abdulkadir has emerged the best graduating medical student at the International University of Africa in Khartoum, Sudan in yet another accolade to the country.

The Cable quotes her as telling the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in a telephone interview from Sudan that not just her academic achievements but also her life in general is a massive miracle since her father died when she was around three years old and her mother when she was six years old.

“My academic achievements so far, till today, seem like a miracle to me. Not only that, my life as a whole is a pack of miracles,” she said. With no hope of going further in her education after her mother’s death, Abdulkadir was saved by helper called Alhaja Sekinat Adekola.

“Thinking that was the end of schooling for me, my grandmother withdrew me from the school but the founder, Alhaja Sekinat Adekola, gave me scholarship for my primary and secondary education. 

“I emerged best student in my primary and secondary schools and even in my WASC, and I had a high score of 274 in my UTME examination. “I have always had passion to be a medical doctor, but because I was not sure of my chances I filled Bio-Chemistry in my JAMB form and came out with a high score of 274.


Ghanaian songstress Wiyaala on the rising popularity of African music, being compared to Grace Jones, and finding fame with her ‘androgynous’ image

Dubbed the ‘young Lioness of Africa’, Wiyaala is a musical force to be reckoned with. Hailing from Ghana, the fast-rising artist sings in both English and her native language, Sissala, creating a style that she calls ‘Sissala Pop.’

Often singing about the stories and traditions of her childhood, and fusing those tales with contemporary Western song structures, Wiyaala self-released her first album, Tuma, in 2009.

Three years later, she was a member of the group Black N Peach, who won the music reality show, Vodafone Icons Mixed Edition 2012.

But with solo success in her sights, the singer, born Noella Wiyaala, formed her own identity – opting to use her surname (which translates to “the doer” in Sissala) as her professional name, and adopting a fierce and fabulous image to match.
She went on to find favour with her 2013 hits Make Me Dance and Rock My Body, which were both nominated for awards at Ghana’s 4Syte TV Music Video Awards.



The following year was filled with further success. She released her World Cup anthem Go Go, Black Stars for Ghana’s national football team; she was confirmed as the face of Pepsi Ghana; she was nominated for Female Fashion Personality of The Year at the Fashion Icons Awards; and she won the award for the Most Promising Musician in Africa at The All Africa Music Awards.

Having also racked up a plethora of live performances, Wiyaala will now bring her unique style to UK shores, when she performs as part of the world renowned WOMAD music festival next month.



Here, the songstress talks to Life & Style about the rising popularity of African music in the mainstream; being compared to Grace Jones; and embracing her ‘androgynous’ image.

How do you describe your musical style?
I think Afro-pop would broadly define my musical style. I sing in Sissala, Waale and English, often mixing the languages up. So sometimes I call it Sissala Pop.

I often sing about the stories and the traditions of my childhood, using contemporary western song structures – you know like, verse, chorus; verse, chorus; bridge, chorus, etc. I think it’s because there is a very strong melodic tradition in the music of the West and my work shows that they can work well together.

What inspired your love of music?
My surroundings as a child played a huge part. My mother was a chorister so music was everywhere. I come from a family of songwriters and musicians, but I am the first one to make it out of the village.

There was no electricity and so we would make our own entertainment under the moonlight in the village. My song Siiko is about those days. Sometimes we might occasionally see videos of Madonna and Michael Jackson thanks to the one TV and generator in the village.

After the TV went off, I would imitate both of them, their dance moves and everything. I didn’t know what they were singing about so I would make up my own words to fit the melodies. Back then I was a star in my village. I was inspired by that as much as African musical traditions, which is why when you hear me today, you hear both influences.

What are your key memories of growing up in Ghana?
I used to walk around a lot scouting and hunting lizards with the boys using catapults. I also used to get beaten a lot for stubbornness and doing wild things – there was a special cane in the house reserved for me. I remember playing football, wrestling and looking for trouble. I was happy doing these things.

At school, you were described as ‘man-woman’, and now, as an artist, your image is often described as androgynous. Do you consider that an accurate description?
I love this question! Am I actually a man dressed as a woman? Well, last time I checked, I’m all woman. But yes, it is kind of accurate. I was always a little boy more than a little girl. I played aggressive football and at school I was known as ‘man-woman’. I ride big motorbikes and I am very strong for a girl. So to be honest, since it has helped me to gain identity in showbiz, I’ve encouraged it a little!

How do you feel about being compared to Grace Jones?
I love it! I’ve been compared to Angelique Kidjo, Mariam Makeba, Brenda Fassie, Tracy Chapman and most recently Katy Perry. What a line-up – even I’m impressed!

Recent years have seen the mainstream take a greater interest in African music, with increased radio airplay for Afrobeats, and major label signings of several African artists. Do you think this interest will be long-lasting?
Totally. African talent is just as good as any other. What is happening is that we Africans are now learning better how to make an impact. Standards of production and marketing are improving month by month.

What can audiences expect from your WOMAD performance and are you looking forward to it?
Looking forward to it? I’ve been waiting for this kind of stage since I was about five years old! I’ve actually got two performances at Womad. The first is to cook a traditional Ghanaian dish for the festival-goers at their Taste The World stand in the morning. The second is my musical performance. The food will be tasty and I will do a couple of acoustic numbers to help it go down well! As for the performance, I am an entertainer so if the audience don’t go home feeling good, I have not done my job. My musical menu will be full of contrasts, the echoes and sounds of my childhood, through to a total African rock-out vibe.

Anything else you’d like to add?
I want to tell your readers that I don’t believe Africa is a complete basket case. Africa is rising. There are many hugely talented young Africans and they are the future. I believe in that future.

Written by Davina Hamilton 


The future for Africa in the coming years will be driven by the talent base of its citizens and not how well the continent is anchored in terms of minerals resources, according to one of Africa’s leading economists, Mr Donald Kaberuka.

Experts project that Africa’s population will grow to 2.5 billion by 2025, and host the world’s workforce by 2030, although its economies are currently faced with an uphill task of translating this demographic dividend into growth.

“There is a need to invest in education and skills growth, gather as many skills as possible now in any field because the future will be dependent more on talent rather than capital,” said Mr Kaberuka (right), formerly of the Africa Development Bank, during the ongoing World Economic Forum on Africa in Kigali, Rwanda.

He said: “The economies of the future will be dependent on talent, what you know rather than what you have. Going forward, if you look at the future, it will be shaped by nano technology, genetics, artificial intelligence.”

For many years, many African economies have been rocked by a number of obstacles, some self-inflicted.

For instance, political instabilities have side tracked many counties from development or even regressed others from the growth realised.

“Over 200 million people in the Great Lakes region have been caught up in conflicts, but time has come to overcome this, economies need to invest in young people now,” said Mr Victor Ochen, the executive director of the African Youth Initiative Network-Uganda, during the forum.

Education, though seen as a strong tool to uplift the growing young population, has been found to be lacking the needed pragmatism to help youth venture into wealth creation and business.

By Moses Gahigi


New York-based Farai Simoyi is one of the rising stars of the catwalk with her self-titled clothing line. Born in London, raised in Zimbabwe and educated in the United States, she has caught the attention of fashion enthusiasts around the world.

When she first moved to New York City, she was hired as a Senior Denim Designer for House of Dereon, the clothing line by mega-artist, Beyonce and her mother, Tina Knowles. Simoyi recalls one day, standing on the 17th floor of a building in Times Square, the heart of Manhattan and having an epiphany; “look at how far I have come and how much I have accomplished; I am a Zimbabwean designer on the design team TISI +1.02% for Beyonce’s clothing line and my parents were raised in huts in Zimbabwe, Africa,” she said, awed by the trajectory of her life.



Having worked with pop star Beyonce, she is currently the senior designer for hip-hop artist Nicki Minaj's fashion collection.

Much like her boss Nicki Minaj, the only woman on the FORBES’ Hip Hop Cash Kings list (since 2011) who once told a Forbes contributor, “I am not going to fall back from something because it’s never been done before by a woman,” Simoyi’s foray into fashion took the same tone and tenacity. “Building my own fashion label from scratch has been a major challenge on it’s own, but building a brand in one of the most unstable industries is even tougher,” said the Zimbabwean fashion designer, “but I don’t see myself doing anything else,” she emphasized, resolutely.




Hear her, "Working with #Beyonce and #NickiMinaj has been such an eye-opener and such an amazing experience because I always tell people, you know, you can't get to that level of stardom without being brilliant and without being a genius".






Ofole Christian Ikechukwu also known as OcinaChukwu is a fast rising, creative, multi-versatile song writer, gospel rapper and a comedian you need to watch out for.

In Celebrating Bishop Dr Mike Okonkwo (MFR) the Presiding Bishop of the Redeemed Evangelical Mission (TREM) @71 Birthday Anniversary, Ocinachukwu has dropped yet another one.

 After a successful release of Ope and Jawaniya Nma ft @iam_makas, he dedicates this Beautiful song to celebrate his Father in the Lord @71 Title ''AMEN''

Download here
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