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Nigerians dominate 7th African Fashion Designer Awards as AmDiddyy & Stephnora wins African Male & Female Fashion Designer of the Year 2024

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Nigerians dominate 7th African – The stage was lit…


The stage was lit with designs of young talented indigenous fashion designers across Africa who showcased  African culture and heritage through their creatives. The runway show at the Oriental Hotel Lagos was graced with designs ranging from Urban wears , casual and classy wears, captivating the attention of everyone seated for the 2024 African Fashion Designer Awards. Most of the fashion designers who showcased their designs have always dreamt of having a successful fashion business and part of the ways they are making efforts to pursue this dream was by showcasing their designs at the 7th African Fashion Designer Awards. Due to the dynamic nature of the fashion industry, most fashion designers find a fashion business quite challenging. However, with perseverance and hard work, a successful fashion business can not only be profitable but soul-satisfying as well. According to statistics, apparel companies have around 42% profit margins. With such high-profit margins and a great demand for apparel, a fashion business can be quite lucrative. However, this also means that there are already many players in the market and the competition will be high. Also, the fashion industry is always evolving around the needs of consumers. This makes the field quite risky business-wise. But if things fall in place, a successful apparel business can prove to be life-changing. These were some of the highlights discussed at the 2024 African Fashion Designer Awards. Most of the fashion Designers who showcased, through their designs showed a good fashion sense, knowledge in apparel making and had good foresight regarding future fashion trends. Speaking during the event, King Dasilva Olasunkanmi, CEO and Founder, African Fashion Designer Awards 2024 said the event was the Seventh (7th) edition and they have been pushing so hard to ensure that they keep the consistency going. “This year’s theme is titled ‘Fashion Urban. This is to take you back to the streets telling out stories in different creatives as every design is a story of its own. We want to see how we can come together to embrace everyone in terms of culture and heritage. This is also to encourage young ones from the slum. This event gives designers a platform to showcase their creatives to the world. Some of them, this is their first time, while some others are inhouse designers from previous editions. “We have 9 designers showcasing at the event. The maximum number of pieces is 15. Although some are able to do eight pieces, some 10 and some even six. Every year has a theme and every theme is totally different and unique in their way. So every year, we come up with something different to bring designers together, unite them so that they can also share ideas in terms of creativity from one another,” King Dasilva said. He explained that for those being honoured with awards, this is based on how they have been promoting the African and Nigerian culture and based on how they have been impactful in their businesses and to the youths also. “I thought of how to promote and motivate these designers. If there are no platforms to keep motivating them, they won’t be able to go beyond their environment. Some people just see these people as tailors but they have been really adding meaningfully to the fashion industry.” 7th African fashion designer award is proudly sponsored and supported by Lagos tourism art and culture, Lagos internal revenue service, JOHNNIE WALKER, SBD GLOBAL MEDIA, LAURA BEAUTY AFRICA, PULSE NIGERIA, ARISE TV, ASQURED NETWORK, HARRISON AESTHETIC and NDIBRAND. Below are honorees and winners for the 7th African fashion designer award 2024. Honoree: Mimi Orjiekwe – African Distinguish business entrepreneur of the year femaleIbrahim Adams (VJ Adams) – African iconic on air personality of the yearDr Apostle flourish Peter – African Distinguish global iconic leadership impact of the year maleHarrison Aesthetic – African Distinguish Aesthetic beautician of the yearEso Dike – African Distinguish shining star actor award of the year male Spice TV – Africa African fashion best television station of the year Arise TV – African best television station of the yearDetola Jones – African Distinguish shining star actor of the year female SBD Global media – African Emerging Global media of the yearJerome Arab – African Distinguish producer of the yearKunle Remi – African best lead actor of the year maleBolaji Ogunmola – African best lead actor of the year female Folajimi Akinsola – African lifestyle entrepreneur of the yearLinda ikeji – African iconic media personality of the the year, CEO Linda Ikeji Media Uche Nnaji – African fashion icon of the decadeJeffery Odey – African young personality of the year Taye Arimoro – African best next rated actor of the year Andy Ogbechi & Ayo Ohuruogu – Lifetime Achievement Awards Co CEOs & Partners A Squared NetworkLaura Ikeji – African Emerging cosmetics brand of the year, CEO Laura beauty Africa Nwanyibuife Eunice Okam – African fashion female entrepreneur of the year, CEO (ERICA MOORE) Felix Asuquo – African fashion male entrepreneur of the year, CEO Fai world African fashion discovery of the year, Finch wear Gladys Lasila – African female humanitarian award of the yearAbbas Kaijuka – African outstanding fashion stylist of the year, CEO Kais divo collectionHarrison Gwamnishu – African best Humanitarian award of the year male Hon. Mrs Toke Benson – African iconic Global impact of the year female Honorable commissioner Lagos tourism art and culture Itumeleng Malefetsa – African fitness entrepreneur of year maleSamuel Agbaje – African fashion Young entrepreneur of the year, CEO XNM ATELIER OmoBolaji Ademosu – African fashion male bespoke couture of the yearMercy Aigbe Adeoti – Award of excellence in acting and filmmaking Mr Ayodele Subair – Award of Excellence Executive Chairman Lagos Internal Revenue Service Pulse Nigeria – African Most outstanding media agency of the decade Bling Line jewelries – African fashion accessories of the year Winners African fashion designer of the year male – AmdiddyyAfrican fashion designer of the year female – Stephnora fashion African fashion model of the year female – Omotayo OkeAfrican fashion model of the year – Thokozisa Kwanele Goodenough Thusi African fashion brand of the year male – Amdiddyy African fashion brand of the year female – Stephnora fashion African fashion photography of the year – Zebra photography African fashion urban of the year – Stephnora fashion African fashion emerging designer of the year – Nihinlewawa Empire African on air personality of the Natacha Akide – (Symply Tacha) WinnerAfrican most fashionable celebrity of the year – Uti NwachukwuAfrican fashion influencer of the year – Neo Akpofure Production Team #FeaturedPost
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What your BVN can now reveal about you in 2025

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Today it does much more. Governments, banks and fintechs access BVN data to profile you for loans, employment screening, subsidy payments and more. Beyond identity confirmation it now underpins credit scoring, transaction monitoring and even mobile money limits.

With every new integration your financial habits join a growing digital dossier. Understanding what your BVN reveals helps you protect your privacy and challenge improper data use.

Below are key insights institutions can derive from your BVN in 2025 and why you need to stay informed.

RECOMMENDED: 5 easy ways to check your Bank Verification Number (BVN)

1. Account aggregation

All savings, current and forex accounts opened under your BVN are visible to institutions. Your complete list of active and inactive accounts lets banks see how many relationships you maintain and which services you use most.

2. Credit history and score

Late repayments, loan defaults and repayment amounts recorded under your BVN feed into a unified credit score. Lenders use this score to set interest rates, decide on collateral requirements and determine loan tenors.

3. Income verification

Salary credits and regular deposits linked to your BVN allow employers and lenders to confirm your declared income. Inconsistent deposit patterns can trigger further background checks before job offers or credit approvals.

4. Subsidy and social benefit eligibility

Agencies cross-check BVN records before releasing student loans, pension funds or food subsidies. An inactive or missing BVN can delay disbursements or render you ineligible for government support programmes.

EXPLORE: BVN has no expiry date – CBN


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5. Digital wallet and fintech usage

Your transaction volume and frequency in mobile money wallets or payment apps are tied to your BVN. Platforms use this data to determine transaction limits, apply service fees and offer promotional rates based on your usage profile.

6. Anti-money laundering monitoring

Regulators and banks review BVN audit trails to flag unusual activity such as large cash deposits, multiple accounts in different states or transfers to high-risk regions. These alerts can prompt investigations or temporary account freezes.

7. Cross-sector identity linkages

Beyond banking, telecom providers and utility companies use BVN verification for SIM activation and meter registration. A single BVN breach could expose your identity across multiple services, making holistic data protection essential.

As the BVN ecosystem expands, safeguarding your number and associated details is crucial. Always confirm legitimate requests, update your contact information promptly and report any unauthorised BVN queries to your bank and the national data protection authority.

ALSO READ: CBN says BVN will remain for life


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Revealed: What Buhari was really eating in Aso Rock

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It is no longer news that the former Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has died.

The announcement came late last night, stating that he passed away at a private hospital in London on July 13, 2025, after a brief illness. His death, unsurprisingly, has triggered mixed reactions across the country, ranging from prayers for his departed soul and celebration from frustrated citizens.

While some political allies and loyalists mourned him, many Nigerians, especially the youth, are openly celebrating having endured his two-term administration, largely marked by economic hardship, broken promises, and silence in times of crisis.

Most of the criticism stems from his years in office, during which Nigeria slipped into two recessions and millions fell deeper into poverty. Yet, amid all this, Buhari’s government maintained an alarmingly extravagant lifestyle within Aso Rock. The feeding budget for the presidency alone raised eyebrows every year.

What Buhari Was Eating In Aso Rock

Buhari ate good, or so it seems. In Buhari’s 2017 budget, ₦850 million was allocated for food, cooking gas, and kitchen utensils at Aso Rock:

  • ₦100.8 million for kitchen utensils (forks, knives, etc.)

  • ₦360 million for foodstuffs and catering materials

  • ₦63 million for cooking gas

  • ₦114.9 million for the president’s food alone

According to the report, this breakdown was part of the ₦42 billion total allocated to the State House. Analysts noted that the utensil budget alone could have built at least five health centres. Premium Times also reported that in just three years, the presidency spent over ₦420 million on catering equipment alone, excluding food and gas, a figure they said could have reversed malnutrition among children in IDP camps.

They were definitely cooking up a storm with that exorbitant amount. But, alas! a friend of the deceased president in an interview in 2015 said his best food was a simple meal. It wasn’t steak or the most expensive meal in the world. It was a humble meal called tuwo alikama.

Alhaji Ahmed Babankowa, a retired police commissioner and close associate of Buhari for over four decades, said Buhari had a deep love for tuwo alikama (a wheat-based dish) served with various local soups like okra. Even while travelling, meals were pre-packed and stored in the convoy. His drink choices were also modest. Fanta, Coca-Cola, and water made up his beverage selection, no alcohol and no wine.

Despite the hardship many Nigerians faced during his time in office, Buhari, according to Babankowa, reportedly never missed his three square meals, but his simplicity did not stop Aso Rock from becoming a palace of excess.


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Recently, Garba Shehu, Buhari’s former spokesperson, also attempted to paint a picture of modesty in his book Lessons from a Presidential Spokesperson’s Experience. He wrote that Buhari ate basic foods like:

  • Tuwo (dough-like dishes made from grains)

  • Pap

  • Akara (bean cake), Beans

  • Wheat

  • Salads

  • Poultry

  • Mutton

According to him, Buhari once rejected a ₦10 million meal budget and demanded it be slashed. Despite enjoying the most carefully prepared and lavish meals, Nigerian leaders, including Buhari, continue to frequently fly abroad for medical treatment.

Like Buhari, Like Tinubu

This wasteful pattern, unfortunately, continues with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. In his 2024 budget, Tinubu and Vice President Kashim Shettima allocated ₦660.5 million for meals, amounting to ₦1.8 million daily. The president’s office alone will spend over ₦287 million on foodstuffs and another ₦33.6 million on “refreshments and meals.”

If tomorrow, Tinubu’s spokesperson writes a book and claims his best food was agbado paired with ube, and that was most of what he ate in Aso Rock during his tenure, would you be surprised? While Buhari may have had simple tastes, the structure and operations of Aso Rock were anything but frugal. Whether Garba Shehu’s comments were true or not, we may never truly know.


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My serving food is humility, not campaign strategy – Peter Obi replies critics

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The 2027 presidential aspirant, Peter Obi, has reacted to criticisms that trailed the viral photos and videos of him serving food at a recent event in Imo State.

Responding to critics in a post on his official X account on Sunday, July 13, 2025, Obi said his gesture was borne out of humility and service to humanity.

The former Anambra State Governor stressed that the act was not intended to be a campaign strategy, accusing “paid agents” of twisting a sincere gesture into “something political.”

He urged Nigerians to have a mind shift away from performative charity to a culture of consistent compassion.

ALSO READ: Atiku-Obi merger can’t stop Tinubu in 2027 – Presidency

This is coming on the heels of a wave of criticisms that greeted the footage, which showed Obi carrying a tray of food and serving guests at the Jubilee of Hope event in Imo state last weekend.

“My weekend activity of serving food at a special event has been generating interest, as expectedly, because leaders in our society have removed the service component in leadership,” he wrote.

“It’s sounding strange that I was seen serving food to people. Let me be clear, that event was not about me. It was called the Jubilee of Hope, and its purpose is straightforward, to remind us all that true leadership is service, and that those who have must never forget those who do not.”

Obi says he didn’t serve food for the cameras

The Labour Party presidential flag-bearer in 2023 stated that he neither posted about the event nor invited media, adding that content from the event found its way to the internet through third parties outside of his team.


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“As expected, the usual naysayers and paid agents went to work trying to twist something sincere into something political,” he added.

Obi stressed that the Jubilee of Hope wasn’t a performative gathering, but rather a conscientious event, where the privileged are reminded of their responsibility to the less fortunate.

“But let me restate the heart of the matter, the Jubilee of Hope is designed for the rich to come down from their high places, even if just for a moment, and serve the poor, not as a show, but as a symbol of the society we must build. A society anchored on empathy, equity, and responsibility,” he said.

He clarified that he wasn’t the only attendee who served food at the occasion, naming other prominent Nigerians, including John Onaiyekan, a cardinal and former Catholic archbishop of Abuja, Osita Izunaso, and A.B.C. Orjiako, former chairman of Seplat Plc, as co-participants in the outreach.

“It wasn’t about the cameras; it was about conscience.

“I am genuinely surprised that this simple act has become a topic of discussion. As Governor, I always served others whenever we had events. Even now, in private life, I do not have a house help.

“When guests visit my home, I serve them myself. I live simply, I sweep, I clean, because for me, humility is not a campaign strategy; it is a way of life,” he wrote.

The presidential hopeful further disclosed that he chose to stay longer at the event because many of the underprivileged in attendance requested to be served directly by him.

“I could not ignore them. That was the only reason. Otherwise, there was nothing special about what I did. Service is not special; it is expected.

ALSO READ: ‘This is how society should be’: Obi explains viral food-sharing moment

“We cannot speak of building a New Nigeria while ignoring the hungry, the forgotten, and the poor. Events like this must not remain symbolic; they must become cultural. Public office holders, business leaders, and everyday citizens must unite in lifting others.

“Let us work together to build a country where hope is not seasonal, and dignity is not a privilege, but a right,” Obi concluded.


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