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Before you move out of your parents house, Know this - Ifioque Bernard.

Facebook(https://www.facebook.com/ifiokb1)

Ifioque Bernard Mid-twenties, of Ibibio ethnicity.
A social media influencer. Music lover, lyricist, part-time image processor, and pianist.
Once well fed, can be a writer.
Loves travel, an inquisitive mind, and is always ready for something weird


If you've finally made it out of daddy's house, congratulations. If you still live with mum or dad, this post is for you.
First off, understand this. There's no irresponsibility - even socially - earned by living with one's parents. It's just an ideology, that adult children leave their parents and be independent.
This is a brilliant ideology, but it exists with its downsides.
Here are 5 reasons you shouldn't rush out of your parents' house to prove any unnecessary point:

1. YOU CAN SAVE MORE MONEY LIVING WITH YOUR PARENTS:
You're being fed, housed, protected and generally being cared for by your loving parents. You don't pay for a tenth of the things you'll be paying for when you move out. Isn't this the right time to save a whole lot for yourself? Get a job, a skill - anything legitimate that fetches money - and see how much you will save after a few months.

You see these big boys in Nigeria today, most of them were able to shoot that far with help  - plenty help - from their parents. You may say they aren't real men, but who told you a real man can't be helped, least of all by their own parents? hello?
This is the prime of your life; invest in yourself - get a degree, a job, or a skill - while mum and dad take care of the other parts. You'll be grateful tomorrow.

1. THEY'RE YOUR PARENTS FOR CRYING OUT LOUD :
This is clear. They freaking bore you. In India, it is commonplace to find "children" living with their parents to the age of 40 or thereabout - yes, I know this: I have Indian friends. Plenty guys and ladies whose parents are executives or wealthy citizens in this country still live with their parents and that doesn't make them any lesser than you, Mr / Ms Independent.

2. THE OUTSIDE WORLD IS TOUGH, MATE:
Have you tried feeding yourself in mum's house for an entire week on your meager income? Do you have an idea how much it would cost if you were paying rent for the space you have in daddy's place? Have you tried buying diesel or petrol for a generator set or a vehicle for maybe 5 days, or paying for the repair of a refrigerator? These things seem easy (and cheap) from a distance - because we're not the ones paying - but ask your parents how much they amount to by the year's end.

3. EVERYONE AROUND YOU WANTS SOMETHING:
Think of the times when your cousins came for holidays, the times when church members came for visitation, the times when you even brought your friends who brought their own friends. Just remember: did any of these sets of visitors leave without a few notes folded into their palms, at least for the their fare? I don't think so.

When you're on your own, the general perception is that you're OK in every level of description. You'll have things to handle, and situations to manage, most of which will have distant origin. Now, can you manage to be that generous when you finally live alone? You know your friends, siblings and other unspecified classifications of people shall be around you regularly - Think...
-----
Now, before making up your mind to move out, consider these:
1. Do you have a job?
2. Can you pay rent?
3. Can you feed yourself - and that guy / girl? (don't dare look at me like that... You know what I'm talking about).
4. Can you defend yourself? ( You lose your parents' covering when you move out)
5. Do you know the exchange rate?
6. Can you endure irritating neighbors, an over-fed, under-sexed landlord, diabolically -infested residences, power failure for months, and can you pray for entire nights, something you weren't doing because your parents were taking it in your stead?
Now, make up your mind.
Happy moving out.
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2018 Best Player Award: FIFA releases nominees [Full list]


World Football governing body, FIFA, has released the nominees for The Best FIFA Men’s Player 2018.
The list is made up of players that put up outstanding performances in their various club sides last season.
The 2017 edition of the award was won by former Real Madrid forward, Cristaino Ronaldo after he helped the club to the Champions League and La Liga titles.
Nominees for the 2018 edition are:
Cristiano Ronaldo
Kevin De Bruyne
Antoine Griezmann
Eden Hazard
Harry Kane
Kylian Mbappe
Lionel Messi
Luka Modric
Mohamed Salah
Raphael Varane
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Davido gave a fan clap back after he tried to make a jest of him😂😂😂


Yes o! Twitter seems to be crazy these days with lots of clap backs and all that.
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Wizkid misplace his phone ones again. and was properly guided on how to get it back😂😂😂





After Wizkid took it to Twitter to tell his fans that he has lost his phone again. some many hillarious replied where thrown. but this dude right here took time to guide him on how to get his phone back in Nigeria😂😂😂
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Trump aide's lawyers: He lied to FBI to protect 'his master'

The lawyers for former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos say in a new court filing that their client lied to the FBI about his contacts with Russians because he was seeking to get a job in the administration at the time and wanted to preserve his loyalty to “his master” — an apparent reference to President Trump.
The new explanation for Papadopoulos’s lies to the FBI came in a 16-page court filing by his lawyers Friday night that also revealed new details about what the former Trump adviser has told special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigators, including his claim that Trump himself specifically approved his efforts to set up a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the 2016 campaign.
As asserted by Papadopoulos’s lawyers, FBI agents first confronted their client after he stepped out of the shower at his mother’s home in Chicago on Jan. 27, 2017 — just one week after Trump’s inauguration. The agents sought to question him about his contacts with Joseph Mifsud, a Kremlin-linked professor in London, and other key figures of interest in the investigation into Russian ties to the Trump campaign.
Papadopoulos admittedly threw agents off the track, telling them that his contacts with Mifsud had begun before he joined the Trump campaign — instead of after he was named as a campaign adviser in March 2016. It was a crucial difference, misleading investigators about Mifsud’s reasons for reaching out to him as part of what the FBI later concluded was a wide-ranging Kremlin effort to cultivate officials of the Trump campaign.
“For that, Mr. Papadopoulos is ashamed and remorseful,” his lawyers wrote.
George Papadopoulos (Photo: George Papadopoulos via Twitter)
But Papadopoulos’s lawyers insist that their client’s motives for lying were “far from the sinister spin” that Mueller’s prosecutors have suggested: Papadopoulos lied because he was trying to get a job with the Trump administration at the time and feared that if he told FBI agents the truth, it would hurt his chances.
“Caught off-guard by an impromptu interrogation, Mr. Papadopoulos misled investigators to save his professional aspirations and preserve a perhaps misguided loyalty to his master,” the lawyers wrote.
The filing by Papadopoulos’s lawyers came a week before his scheduled sentencing by U.S. Judge Randolph Moss. Mueller’s team is seeking a sentence of up to six months in federal prison, contending in their own brief that his lies damaged the FBI investigation, costing agents the opportunity to confront Mifsud when he was in the U.S. The prosecutors also argued that even after he pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate, Papadopoulos provided little “substantial” information that the FBI didn’t already have.
To rebut that contention, Papadopoulos’s lawyers provided other new details about what the former campaign adviser revealed to Mueller as part of his cooperation agreement.
One example of previously undisclosed “critical information,” the lawyers wrote, is that in late May 2016, just before Russian President Vladimir Putin flew to Athens for a state visit, Papadopoulos tipped off the government of Greece to a closely held secret that could affect that year’s U.S. presidential election: that the Russian government possessed “dirt” on Hillary Clinton.
Greek Foreign Minister Nikolaos Kotzias greets U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson at the State Department in Washington, March 13, 2017. (Photo: Aaron P. Bernstein/Reuters)
It has previously been reported that over drinks at a London bar, also in May 2016, Papadopoulos told an Australian diplomat that the Kremlin had “dirt” on Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails.” But the disclosure about his conversation with a senior Greek official — described in the court filing as the foreign minister, apparently a reference to Nikolaos Kotzias — is the first indication that he spread the same information to another foreign government.
Even “more significantly,” the lawyers wrote, Papadopoulos also informed the FBI about Trump’s positive reaction when he first proposed using his Russia contacts to set up a pre-election summit between the then-GOP presidential candidate and Putin.
As laid out in the court filing, Papadopoulos presented his plan to arrange the summit with Putin at a March 31, 2016, meeting in Washington of the Trump campaign’s new national security advisory team. Trump himself presided over the meeting, which included then-Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., now Trump’s embattled attorney general.
“Eager to show his value to the campaign, George announced at the meeting that he had connections that could facilitate a foreign policy meeting between Mr. Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin,” the lawyers wrote. “While some in the room rebuffed George’s offer, Mr. Trump nodded with approval and deferred to Mr. Sessions, who appeared to like the idea and stated that the campaign should look into it.”
That account would appear to contradict Sessions’ testimony to Congress last year that he “pushed back” on the idea of a Trump-Putin summit and told the young adviser that he was not authorized to represent the campaign on the matter.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, Nov. 14, 2017. (Photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
But it confirms an account first revealed in “Russian Roulette” — a book written by this reporter and David Corn — that Papadopoulos believed Trump “gave him encouragement” to pursue the idea.
In fact, after the meeting with Trump and Sessions, Papadopoulos aggressively followed up on his efforts to arrange a Putin summit. He met on several occasions with Mifsud, the Kremlin-linked professor; a young woman named “Olga” who he believed (wrongly) to be Putin’s niece; and a Russia-connected think-tank director in London — all while keeping senior officials of the Trump campaign informed about his efforts.
“George’s giddiness over Mr. Trump’s recognition was prominent during the days that followed the March 31, 2016, meeting,” the lawyers wrote. “He had a sense of unbridled loyalty to the candidate and his campaign and set about trying to organize the meeting with President Putin.”
Papadopoulos apparently learned about the Kremlin file on Clinton during one of his conversations with Mifsud in London in late April, after getting what he believed was the nod of approval from Trump to set up the conference with Putin.
As previously detailed by Mueller’s prosecutors, Papadopoulos had breakfast with Mifsud at a London hotel on April 26, 2016, and first was told that the Russians “had emails of Clinton. They have thousands of emails.”
What Papadopoulos told the Trump campaign about this — if anything — remains unclear. His lawyers wrote that their client later told the FBI “he does not recall” ever passing along the information about the Clinton emails to others in the Trump campaign. (The day after the Mifsud breakfast, Papadopoulos did email campaign policy official Stephen Miller vaguely: “Have some interesting messages coming in from Moscow about a trip when the time is right.”)
Joseph Mifsud (Photo: Juan Manuel Herrera/OAS)
But Papadopoulos did relay the information about the Clinton emails to Alexander Downer, the top Australian diplomat to the United Kingdom, during a night of heavy drinking at the Kensington Wine Room in London. Downer’s later report of that conversation was a critical event that triggered the FBI to open up a counterintelligence investigation into Russia’s efforts to interfere in the 2016 election and its outreach to members of the Trump campaign.
Left unexplained in the new court filing is why Papadopoulos passed along the same information about Russian “dirt” on Clinton to the Greek foreign minister. But the fact that he did so just a few days before Putin visited that country suggests he may have been trying to spur closer ties between Moscow and Athens. At the time, according to published reports, Putin was seeking to drive a wedge between Greece and the European Union and encourage the Greeks to support rolling back E.U. sanctions on Russia for its 2014 annexation of Crimea. That effort had an echo in the Trump campaign’s ambivalence about continuing sanctions against Russia.
Putin’s visit apparently bore some fruit. At his meeting with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Putin told him that Russia would “never negotiate” over its annexation of Crimea. Tsipras did not push back.
“I would like to once again emphasize that strengthening our connections with Russia is our strategic choice,” Tsipras told Putin, according to a Kremlin transcript of the meeting.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, left, welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Maximos Mansion in Athens, Greece, May 27, 2016. (Photo: Orestis Panagiotou/EPA via AP)
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See BBN's Bambam's dress to the AMVCA2018 that is causing a stir online

Bambam stepped out in this feather tube dress to the 2018 AMVCA holding in Lagos. You like? See more photos below

See BBN

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#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs


The 2018 edition of the Africa Magic Viewers Choice award held at the Eko Hotels in Lagos and your favourite celebs turned out in style.

Omotola Jalade Ekeiende, Toyin Abraham, Big Brother Naija's Ceec and other ladies lit up the red carpet with their stunning outfits.

Check them out below....

#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ceec, Omotola, Toyin Abraham, check out 10 of the best dressed female celebs

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#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs




The 2018 edition of the Africa Magic Viewers Choice award held at the Eko Hotels in Lagos and your favourite celebs turned out in style.

Ebuka Obi Uchendu, Uti Nwachukwu, Big Brother Naija's Tobi Bakre and Leo Dasilva, and othet men lit up the red carpet with their stunning outfits.

Check them out below....

#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
#AMVCA2018: Ebuka, Leo Dasilva, Tobi Bakre, check out 10 of the best dressed male celebs
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“Why Nigeria needs to be re-structured” - Atiku Abubakar writesd




Former Vice President and 2019 Presidential hopeful Atiku Abubakar just wrote a piece on 'Why Nigeria needs to be re-structured'.

According to him, 'restructuring is not just about the devolution of powers to the states, it is about transforming the respective roles of the federal, state and local governments to perform more efficiently in matters of territorial as well as economic governance'.

Read the full piece below....

In a recent interaction in the United States, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo asserted that the “problem with our country is not a matter of restructuring…and we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into the argument that our problems stem from some geographic re-structuring”.
It is a surprise that the Vice President would take such a position and, in particular, fail to appreciate the connection between Nigeria’s defective structure and its underperformance.
It is unhelpful to reduce the construct of “Restructuring” to a geographical concept as VP Osinbajo does, which in itself demonstrates a lack of appreciation of the core tenets of the concept.
For the avoidance of doubt, re-structuring is not about the re-drawing of state or regional boundaries. The restructured Nigeria that a large number of Nigerians talk about, is a Nigeria that not only provides opportunities for everyone to work but even more specifically challenges every layer of governance to demonstrate the capacity to create wealth and jobs for the citizens.
Restructuring is not just about the devolution of powers to the states, it is about transforming the respective roles of the federal, state and local governments to perform more efficiently in matters of territorial as well as economic governance.
Above all, when we talk about restructuring, we are not talking about just constitutional tweaks, we are talking about a cultural revolution. It is not about re-shuffling a few responsibilities or resources, but about disrupting the authoritarian politics our democracy has inherited from its military and colonial rulers of past.
Viewed this way, Nigeria needs to be restructured. Nigeria has operated a faulty system of federalism, especially under military governments. Both economic and political structures are defective, resulting in weak economic management systems which, in turn, prevent all levels of the Nigerian government?—?federal, states and local governments, from operating at optimal levels.
Faced with the reality of non-performance, Nigerians have clamoured for the restructuring of the economy towards a more diversified structure. To make this happen would require that we establish and sustain a model of governance which would nurture a spirit of participation and consensus on key national issues and accommodate all the diverse segments of the society. In other words, if we accept the wisdom behind calls for a restructuring of the economy, we must be ready to build a foundation for its success: we must, in other words, re-structure the polity.
The federal structure is so complex with a very strong centre that it has succeeded in accumulating many responsibilities, and along with these, huge resources, which belong to the other levels of government.
It is all too obvious that the current arrangement does not respond to the needs of the people at the local level. We have all too often lied to ourselves that the politicians sitting in Abuja can effectively respond to the needs of a population in far remote locations as Kaura Namoda, Iseyin, Arochukwu or Bama. Only the autonomy of the local governments and the states both of which are closer to their people than the Central Government in Abuja can guarantee this and result in more effective decisions. Only when local administrations are on the saddle, will there be greater accountability for decision making as well as improved flexibility, adaptability and ability to change as a result of a reduction in bureaucracy.
I strongly believe that the restructuring of Nigeria will foster the spirit of co-operation and consensus in a nation of diverse ethnic groups, cultures, and religions. It is desirable, in fact, you may even say it is required to establish, nurture and sustain a strong and effective democratic government.
In this continuous dialogue, we should remind ourselves that restructuring is not a new or strange phenomenon. A number of developing economies have had cause to restructure their economies, for greater efficiency or to correct imbalances or to reorient them towards, for example, more open and market-oriented systems with greater reliance on the private sector as the engine of growth. Even the United Kingdom is restructuring its political and economic systems to enable a better union among its component parts. Businesses restructure for better performance. Even families do!
Working with the National Assembly and all other stakeholders, we will lead the process of genuine and transparent constitutional amendments, in order to provide the necessary stimulus and focus on how to restructure Nigeria that would work for all.
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AMVCA2018: Full list of winners


The 2018 edition of Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards has just wrapped up where veteran cinematographer, Tunde Kelani, emerged the winner of the AMVCA Industry Merit Award.

He wasn’t the only winner of the night as actress Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde emerged the Best Actress in a drama movie/TV series. Former Big Brother Naija contestant, Bisola Aiyeola also won the Trail Blazer Award.  

Folarin Falana, popularly called Falz carted home the award for Best Supporting Actor in a Movie/TV Series category.

See the full list of winners below...

Best Sound Editor

Tatu - Kolade Morakinyo and Pius Fatoke WINNER
Idahaso Trails - Stanlee Ohikhuare
Alter Ego - Zezom Gnawni
Ojukokoro - Dayo Thompson
Hakkunde - James Coon Falcon

Best Picture Editor

Idemuza - Aloaye Omoake
18 Hours - Mark Maina WINNER
Alter Ego - Moses Inwang/Tunde Bakare
Hakkune - Asurf Oluseyi
Hidden - Jibril Mailafia

Best Lighting Designer Movie/TV Series

Tatu - Akpe Ododoru, Tunde Akinniyi WINNER
Kada River - Godwin Gata
Hidden - Agbo Kelly
Lotanna - McBaror
Children of Mud - Sunday Olalekan

Best Cinematography Movies/TV series

Tatu - Akpe Ododoru
Idemuza - Dickson Godwin
T-Junction - Lester Millado
The Torture - Rwamusigazi Kyakunzire
Okafor's Law - Yinka Edward WINNER
Alter Ego - Bishop Blunt/Adeoye Adeniyi

Best Costume/Designer Movie or TV Series

Tatu - Yolanda Okereke
Isoken - Jade Osiberu
Potato Potahto - Christie Brown
Hakkunde - Joan Gbefwi
The Bridge - Ngozi Obasi and James Bessinone WINNER

Best Short Film/Online Video

The Housewife - Jay Franklin Jituboh
Tolu - Nadine Ibrahim
Penance - Micheal Ama Psalmist' Akinrogunde WINNER
Lodgers - Ken Ogunlola
Tanwa, The Child We Wanted - Adenike Adebayo

Best Documentary

The Flesh Business - Dennis Wanjohi WINNER
Nightfall in Lagos - James Amuta
God's Wives - Bolanle Olukanni
Omidan, Styles Defunct by Ayaworanho3d - Aderemi Davies
Calabar Carnival: What the People Think - Oghenefego Ofili

Best Make Up Artist Movie/TV Series

Tatu - Thelma Ozy Smith, Hakeem Effect Onilogbo WINNER
Ojukokoro - Sandra Oyiana
What Lies Within - Cynthia Ububa
Disguise - Hakeem Effect
Lotanna - Nnenna Emekalam

Best Art Director

Isoken - Jade Osiberu
Tatu - Don Omope, Yolanda Okereke, Segun Arinze, Tolu Awobiyi
Children of Mud - Imoh Umoren
Lotanna - Tunji Afolayan WINNER
Idahaso Trails - Stanlee Ohikhuare
Hidden - Jibril Mailafia

Best Soundtrack Movies/TV Series

M0 - Tom Koroluk
Banana Island Ghost - Enyi Omeruah and Funbi Ogunbanwo
Bella - Andrew Ahuura
Tatu - Evelle WINNER
Idahosa Trails - Oriri Osayamore
18 Hours - Jacktone Okore

Best Indigenous Language Movie or TV Series - Swahili

Super Modo - Sarika Hemi Lhakani  WINNER

Best Indigenous Language Movie or TV Series - Hausa

Mansoor - Ali Nuhu WINNER
Umar Sanda - Kamal S Alkali
Dadin Kowa Sabon Salo - Arewa24
Uwar Bari - Hamisu Lamido Iyantama
Rashinsani - Tiana Johnson

Best Indigenous Language Movies or TV Series - Yoruba

Alakiti - Abiodun Jimoh, Jumoke Odetola
Adaba - Adebayo Salami
Etiko Onigedu - Femi Adebayo WINNER
Egun Iran Kinni - Oyindamola Awotidebe
Ogun Sengese - Ibironke Ojo

Best Indigenous Language Movies or TV Series - Igbo

Bound - Lilian Afegbai WINNER
Ofuobi - Victor Oyke
Uwa Na Eme Nyughari - Tiana Johnson
Oge Nkem - Tiana Oboyi Johnson
Ego Malaysia - Iyooh James Chidozie

Best TV/Drama/Comedy series

Gina and Friends - Paul Igwe
Professor Johnbull - Tchidi Chikere
Papa Ajasco Reloaded - Wale Adenuga
This Is It - Dolapo Adeleke WINNER
Relatives - Tunde Adegbola

Best Movie East Africa

18 Hours - Phoebe Ruguru WINNER
Devil's Chest - Hassan Mageye
The Forbidden - Kizito Samuel Saviour
Rain - Mathew & Eleanor Nabwiso
Bella - Math Bish

Best Movie West Africa

Potato Potahto - Shirley Frimpong-Manso
Alter Ego - Moses Inwang - Esther Eyibo
Isoken - Jade Osiberu WINNER
Tatu - Don Omope, Yolanda Okereke, Segun Arinze, Tolu Awobiyi
Children of Mud - Imoh Umoren
Lotanna - Ifan Micheal

Best Movie Southern Africa

Descent - Awal Abdulfatai
The Road to Sunrise - Shemu Joyah WINNER
Salute! - Phillipe Talavera
Jomako Black Democracy - Abraham Kabwe
Nyasaland - Joyce Mhango Chavula

Trail Blazer Award

Bisola Aiyeola WINNER

Industry Merit Award

Tunde Kelani WINNER

Best Writer Movie/TV Series

Idemuza - Alaoye Omoake
Soul Tie - Kehinde Joseph
Idahosa Trails - Stanlee Ohikhuare
18 Hours - Njue Kevin
The Torture - Mulindwa Richard
Alter Ego - Patrick Nnamani/Koye O/Moses Inwang WINNER
Hakkunde - Tomi Adesina

Best Supporting Actress

Toyin Abraham - Tatu
Dorcas Shola Fapson - Banana Island Ghost
Funlola Afofiyebi-Riami  - Tatu
Ebele Okaro - Blackrose
Lydia Forson - Isoken WINNER
Emem Inwang - Alter Ego

Best Supporting Actor

Saidi Balogun - Banana Island Ghost
Tomiwa Edun - Banana Island Ghost
Falz - New Money WINNER
Kunle Idowu - Idahosa Trails
Gabriel Afolayan - Okafor's Law
Wale Ojo - Betrayal

Best Actress in a comedy and TV series

Rita Dominic - Big Fat Lie
Adesua Etomi - 10 days in Sun city
Queen Nwokoye - Excess Luggage
Bimbo Ademoye - Backup Wife
Dakore Akande - Isoken
Nyce Wanueri - Auntie Boss WINNER

Best Actor in a comedy

Kalu Ikeagwu- Dr Meekam
IK Ogbonna - Excess Luggage
Blossom Chukwujekwu - The Big Fat Lie
Odunlade Adekola - A Million Baby WINNER
OC Ukeje - Potato Potahto
Jimmy Olukoya - Guy Man

Best Actress in a Drama/TV Series

Agaba Joan - The Torture
Keira Hewatch - The Witness Box
Miriam Kayode - Children of Mud
Cinderella Sanyu - Bella
Omotola Jalade Ekeinde - Alter Ego WINNER
Lilian Echelon - Black Rose

Best Actor in a Drama Series

Wale Ojo - Alter Ego
Kalu Ikeagwu - Benevolence
Rushabiro Raymond - The Torture
Adjetey Anang  - Keteke WINNER
Adjetey Anang - Sidechic Gang
Chris Attoh - Esohe

Best Director

Moses Inwang - Alter Ego
Aloaye Omoake - Idemuza
Asurf Oluseyi - Hakkunde
Don Omope - Tatu
Jade Osiberu - Isoken WINNER
Mulindwa Richard - The Torture
Shirley Frimpong-Manso - Potato Potahto

Best Overall Movie

Potato Potahto - Shirley Frimpong-Manso
Alter Ego - Moses Inwang
18 Hours - Phoebe Ruguru
Devil's Chest - Hassan Mageye
Descent - Awal Abdulfatai
The Road to Sunrise - Shemu Joyah
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