During a skincare challenge prep, teammates Sultana and Faith got into an altercation and Sultana called Faith bossy, and their argument over a supply basket turned physical. In the tug-of-war, Sultana fell and twisted her ankle. .....
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Thursday, October 02, 2025
BBNaija S10 Drama: Sultana And Faith In Physical Altercation
There is another set of drama in Big Brother Naija Season 10 house and the hashtag #DisqualifyFaith is trending.....
19 comments:
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It’s only a mad stupid fool that will support this short demon. Never seen such a troublesome and disgusting human my entire life
ReplyDeleteOnly low IQ people will be upset at faith. EOD.
Delete17:34 you stupid thing. Your faith has been DISQUALIFIED ntorrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
DeleteFaith needs help the guy is really sick in the head. Kò gbádùn rárá
DeleteShooter,
DeletePoint confirmed. Only low IQ.....
Shooter bae mk I help you ntoooorrrr mmeeeee😀😀🤣🤣🤣🤣
DeleteI like Faith but honestly he should calm down at this point. He has no right to force a fellow housemate to carry out task, he has no right. He went too far.
ReplyDeleteYesterday was him and Mensan. He should calm down before he spoils things for himself.
Very troublesome youngman, wonder what his supporters see in him
ReplyDeleteSo, Biggie gathered them in the lounge and played the video of the altercation to the housemates.
ReplyDeleteFaith wasn't even feeling remorseful throughout the replay,he had something like a smirk on his face.
Verdict:Biggie condemned the violence and read the riot act to everyone.Faith was disqualified from Big brother house, immediately.
He’s never remorseful. I read on X about starting a movement to revoke his medical license. I’ll be the happiest if that happens!
DeleteWhen He Entered The Dairy Room This Afternoon He Was Explaining Himself To Biggie ..
ReplyDeleteBiggie Ask Him Why He's Taking It Personnel With Biggie Tone He Does Not Like What Faith Did ..
Nah Him Sabi Him Wahala Too Much
Hello iya Boys
Stella, Faith has been disqualified from Big brother
ReplyDeleteIs like Faith has been disqualified ooo
ReplyDeleteCredit Pere Egbi
ReplyDeleteLet’s talk about what really happened between Faith and Sultana during the group task. Because it wasn’t just a fight over a basket, it was a clash of presence, power, timing, ego, and perception.
The setup is simple: the house was given a group task. Some of the housemates, including Faith, got right to work. They were already contributing when Sultana, who had earlier agreed to participate, chose instead to play pool while the others were building. That choice alone matters. In group settings, timing communicates priority. When people see you disengage while they’re working, it signals detachment. When you show up late and try to take over, it creates tension, whether intentional or not.
Eventually, Sultana decided to join in. But as soon as she did, the atmosphere shifted. Faith called her out, likely frustrated: “We’ve been waiting for you… now you’re just coming?” Sultana fired back. The words weren’t kind. What started as passive tension quickly evolved into a verbal standoff. Now it wasn’t just about helping with the task, it became about pride, ego, and social positioning.
Then came the flashpoint: Sultana picked up the basket, a key element of the task. Faith told her to drop it. She refused. He physically stepped in front of her. She still tried to walk away. And just like that, they both started dragging the basket, locked in a tug-of-war that had nothing to do with the task itself anymore.
At this point, the basket wasn’t just an object, it was a symbol of control.
For Faith, the basket represented order. He had been working. He wasn’t going to let someone who hadn’t lifted a finger now act like a team lead.
For Sultana, it may have been about reclaiming space. About being seen. About not appearing irrelevant. Her instinct was to grab the one thing that gave her immediate visibility, regardless of timing.
The struggle intensified. Faith yanked the basket fiercely, and Sultana fell.
That was the breaking point. It had gone from disagreement to physical conflict.
But even that didn’t end it.
Sultana came back and grabbed the basket again.
Faith followed and took it back from her again.
This wasn’t about contribution anymore, it was about dominance. Two people caught in a psychological feedback loop, neither willing to lose ground. The basket, once a neutral prop, had become the flag of victory in a war of ego.
Now here’s the truth: both were wrong…but not equally.
Yes, Faith crossed a line when he yanked the basket so fiercely it caused Sultana to fall. That moment reflects emotional intensity, a failure to de-escalate, and reactive behavior under pressure. He let his frustration dictate his actions, and that’s not excusable.
But his reaction was not unprovoked.
Sultana triggered the disruption by arriving late, ignoring the natural order of work already in place, and trying to take charge without reading the energy in the room. She didn’t blend in, she tried to control. When asked to stop, she didn’t. And even after falling, she returned to escalate again. That shows emotional impulsivity, a need to win, and an inability to step back, even after things had gotten physical.
So no, this wasn’t a case of man vs. woman. It was a case of disruption vs. order. One person had already been building. The other showed up late and tried to take the lead.
And when that didn’t go down well, things spiraled.
From a psychological standpoint:
Sultana was wrong first. Faith was wrong next. But not equally.
Sultana lit the match.
Faith threw it into the basket.
Both lacked emotional regulation.
Rubbish take! Pere has always being his fan so not surprised and this nonsense piece. Didn’t even read till the end 🥱
DeleteChikalicious Nwannem come and read for me oo 🤣🤣🤣🤣
DeleteLet’s talk about what really happened between Faith and Sultana during the group task. Because it wasn’t just a fight over a basket, it was a clash of presence, power, timing, ego, and perception.
ReplyDeleteThe setup is simple: the house was given a group task. Some of the housemates, including Faith, got right to work. They were already contributing when Sultana, who had earlier agreed to participate, chose instead to play pool while the others were building. That choice alone matters. In group settings, timing communicates priority. When people see you disengage while they’re working, it signals detachment. When you show up late and try to take over, it creates tension, whether intentional or not.
Eventually, Sultana decided to join in. But as soon as she did, the atmosphere shifted. Faith called her out, likely frustrated: “We’ve been waiting for you… now you’re just coming?” Sultana fired back. The words weren’t kind. What started as passive tension quickly evolved into a verbal standoff. Now it wasn’t just about helping with the task, it became about pride, ego, and social positioning.
Then came the flashpoint: Sultana picked up the basket, a key element of the task. Faith told her to drop it. She refused. He physically stepped in front of her. She still tried to walk away. And just like that, they both started dragging the basket, locked in a tug-of-war that had nothing to do with the task itself anymore.
At this point, the basket wasn’t just an object, it was a symbol of control.
For Faith, the basket represented order. He had been working. He wasn’t going to let someone who hadn’t lifted a finger now act like a team lead.
For Sultana, it may have been about reclaiming space. About being seen. About not appearing irrelevant. Her instinct was to grab the one thing that gave her immediate visibility, regardless of timing.
The struggle intensified. Faith yanked the basket fiercely, and Sultana fell.
That was the breaking point. It had gone from disagreement to physical conflict.
But even that didn’t end it.
Sultana came back and grabbed the basket again.
Faith followed and took it back from her again.
This wasn’t about contribution anymore, it was about dominance. Two people caught in a psychological feedback loop, neither willing to lose ground. The basket, once a neutral prop, had become the flag of victory in a war of ego.
Now here’s the truth: both were wrong…but not equally.
Yes, Faith crossed a line when he yanked the basket so fiercely it caused Sultana to fall. That moment reflects emotional intensity, a failure to de-escalate, and reactive behavior under pressure. He let his frustration dictate his actions, and that’s not excusable.
But his reaction was not unprovoked.
Sultana triggered the disruption by arriving late, ignoring the natural order of work already in place, and trying to take charge without reading the energy in the room. She didn’t blend in, she tried to control. When asked to stop, she didn’t. And even after falling, she returned to escalate again. That shows emotional impulsivity, a need to win, and an inability to step back, even after things had gotten physical.
So no, this wasn’t a case of man vs. woman. It was a case of disruption vs. order. One person had already been building. The other showed up late and tried to take the lead.
And when that didn’t go down well, things spiraled.
From a psychological standpoint:
Sultana was wrong first. Faith was wrong next. But not equally.
Sultana lit the match.
Faith threw it into the basket.
Both lacked emotional regulation.
credit: PERE
REST
DeleteVillage people gather cook plenty pepper for him head.
ReplyDelete