Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: Weekend Arena - Teens, ‘Yahoo-Plus’, Rituals And Cultism

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Friday, January 21, 2022

Weekend Arena - Teens, ‘Yahoo-Plus’, Rituals And Cultism

It is unfortunate that we don’t see the likes of Frank Olize, dominating the mass media space like it was when I was young. As the anchor of Newsline, arguably Nigeria’s most-watched TV magazine show in the late 80s and 90s, Olize, full of humour and charm, would open his show with that basic question: ‘It’s 9pm, do you know where your children are?”








It was a question directed at parents of that era. Of course, homes with great family-life would always offer an answer to this rhetorical question. If you cannot, as a family, do so with great certainty, then there is an issue. With today’s unfolding scenarios about cultism, yahoo business, rituals, drug addiction and prostitution, every family on this boat, needs to pay greater attention on how their teenagers are faring.



The reason is simple. Handling teenagers is a tough job, perhaps the toughest portion of the child-raising curve. It sure requires a lot of grace. But as parents, you must play your role, while talking to God to grant you His grace to decorate your efforts, beyond paying huge tuitions and bankrolling pricey vacations. Your regular interactions, assurances, encouragements and advice matter a lot at this stage.


Biologically and psychologically, this stage is crucial and sets the stage to what the child will become. During this stage, the hormones will be running riot, preparing them for puberty, while offering them that sense and quest for self-expression. They also become very conscious of their looks, and begin to have sexual fantasies. The fact that they are overtly naïve makes them vulnerable to easy manipulation.


With each ugly story of youngsters indulging in vices such as cultism, yahoo-plus, drug addiction and ‘money rituals’ comes an underlining incident of a parent, who did not try and pray enough. In the past three weeks or so, the stories have been most brazen in Nigeria: In Jos, Moses Okoh had checked into a hotel with a third year student of UNIJOS, named Jennifer. 



At the end of their tryst, she had been killed with her vital organs harvested. At Egor, near Benin, Osas, had returned from Ghana to perpetrate this same evil on his girlfriend, Elohor Oniorosa. In Sagamu, a viral video showed a dismembered body of a female, purportedly killed by some friends tossed by the wayside at Sabo area of the town. In Kano, we are still grieving over the death of 5-year old Hanifa Abubakar, murdered by kidnappers after collecting a tranche of the ransom. 



At Onitsha, one young man was caught in an attempt to bury a neighbour’s son inside his room so his ‘Yahoo business will mature’. In Lagos, Afeez Olalere, confessed to killing his younger brother. He said: ‘My mother took me to an herbalist who told me if I want to be successful in the yahoo business, I will have to sacrifice one life and that person must be a sibling to me.’



With the under-policed nature of the Nigerian society, numerous other cases may have happened without trace. Where are the CCTV cameras to capture footages of what may have happened in the dead of the night on Third Mainland Bridge, and other such locations in the country? But we cannot continue to wait for the government to do everything. While the digital age, may pre-suppose that solutions to life’s challenges should come with the swiftness of computing algorithms, parents need to talk to their wards, especially the teenagers that life is graded and that patience is a virtue. 



If Afeez Olalere had not been under undue pressure to make money, he would not have seen the ‘desperate need’ to kill his brother, with the encouragement of his mother as a viable option. Much as these youths think that ‘school is scam’, because of lack of jobs and that ‘patience is old-fashioned’, parents should not stop drawing their attention to the benefits of hard work. It pays and avails the wealth one would enjoy at old age. Robert Schuller, American tele-evangelist who hosted, ‘Hour of Power’ for five decades said: “Tough times never last, but tough people do. This has proven to be a timeless fact.

While encouraging our teenagers to compete, we should not push them into the wrong contests of owning fat bank accounts and driving big cars. That it worked for Emma does not mean it would work for Alex. I heard some teenagers, who are not up to 16, have bank balances in excess of N30million realized from Internet scams and the likes. This should not be the reference point to gauge the success or otherwise of our teenagers. Once, someone was describing how successful a friend of his had become in ‘Yahoo business’, and I ‘suggested’ he should send his only son, who is 10 for apprenticeship in the ‘business’, but he flatly turned it down. He wanted his son to be a lawyer.



It is pathetic that the female child is at the receiving end of these crimes. They form bulk of the people being targeted for ritual-killings and the Internet further exacerbates the situation as these evil ‘predators’ lure them with romantic advances only to murder them at the end.


For this reason, parents must stop pushing their daughters to that state of helplessness, where they seek freedom in the wrong places. God help us!

15 comments:

  1. All parents need God direction. Some disciplined parents will still have their children turned out bad, it is only God that can help parents.
    Pls parents should also pray for their children always, if possible always monitor the company they keep.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nobody who said Obi Cubana should hide his wealth from social media is qualified to comment on this post! You are the reason we have so many damaged young people! Awon ZERO MORAL COMPASS!!!

      Delete
  2. Happy New Year Ngozi...It is sad that our values are completely eroded and this thrive in a society where there is no love..We live a jungle life eat or been eaten...The very core of humanity has been destroyed...You don't even know whom to trust, the people you feel you know turn out to be something else...God please protect your children...Nice write up

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  3. Parents should learn to pray for their children and lead and live by exemple. My neighbour always send her 10 years old daughter to buy alcohol for him. Wonder what she will turn out to be.

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  4. Pray. Pray and pray again. As a parent you can only try and leave the rest to God. Children of these days.. hmmmmm. God please help parents. Another issue that is killing young boys is betting. This has made some walking corpse.

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  5. Very scary situation in our lands. May God help the parents to guide and pray for their children. May God give our children the understanding to differentiate evil from God, so that together the family will be a good one.

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  6. Nice write up Mr Ngozi. Apparently those grisly stories you mentioned shows how deadened the consciences of people are becoming. Mostly because of the worship of money, fame and power. Our values as a people have been eroded to dust. For a change we need to start from scratch to imbibe the right values in ourselves, our youth and the whole society. This very lack of integrity is part of what has caused the system failure of this nation, causing everything to go down hill. It saddens me that as bad as things are many people don't even care. It is usually me, myself and I and my family. We need the Ubuntu spirit.

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  7. This situation is very scary. Some of these young people do not want to attend school or learn a skill.

    It's really becoming a crises 😩😞

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  8. You are sir, the days are evil we don't even know who to trust. I pray that God will watch over our children.

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  9. Most people now worship those with money in Nigeria, even among siblings, once you are rich everybody respects you, but if you are poor, OYO is your case, that is why evil quest to make it or die trying will continue until we see the need to instill moral values in homes, churches, schools and everywhere in our society. May God help us

    ReplyDelete
  10. Money is enthroned as god in the country.

    Corrupt leaders loot and flaunt it.

    BBN promotes immorality for a huge Prize money.

    Actresses and musicians display it - money and the attendant luxuries.

    Social media influences outdo one another to show off riches - fake or real.

    You CANNOT SERVE God and Money (Mammon) because you will love one and hate the other. Matthew 6:24

    CHOOSE YOU THIS DAY WHOM YOU WILL SERVE.

    ReplyDelete
  11. I fear for my children's generation. Growing up ,we didn't have this much influence from everything and everyone. But this generation? God , may our labour on our children not be in vain in the name of Jesus Christ.

    ReplyDelete

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