Lifestyle
Ghana Must Go: The Bag, the Border, and the Blame (PHOTOS)

In January 1983, over a million West African migrants—mostly Ghanaians—were expelled from Nigeria in a mass deportation order that came to be remembered by three bitter words: Ghana Must Go.
At the heart of this wave was a blue-and-red chequered plastic bag. Affordable, durable, and easy to carry, it became the makeshift suitcase for desperate migrants forced to pack their lives in hours and leave the country they had called home. That bag would later become forever associated with the phrase
Ghana Must Go—a symbol of exile, xenophobia, and survival.
Nigeria, freshly rich from oil in the 1970s, had drawn thousands of West Africans—including Ghanaians—seeking work, education, and opportunity. But by the early 1980s, oil prices had crashed, unemployment soared, and crime increased. The Nigerian government, under President Shehu Shagari, blamed the economic downturn in part on the influx of undocumented foreigners and ordered their expulsion.
Ghanaians, who had once opened their borders to Nigerians fleeing the Nigerian Civil War in the late 1960s, now found themselves being trucked out in droves, sometimes in dehumanising conditions. The exodus strained Ghana’s already struggling economy, but also marked a painful shift in West African unity.
Today, Ghana Must Go is more than a bag—it is a reminder of how quickly neighbours can become strangers, and how migration, hospitality, and history are often intertwined in complicated, emotional ways.
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Lifestyle
Ghana: Return Home, We’ve Wandered For Too Long – Yul Edochie to Ndigbo

He was reacting to the recent protest by Ghanaians demanding Nigerians must leave their country.
Nollywood actor and politician Yul Edochie has urged Igbos in diaspora to return home.
He was reacting to the recent protest by Ghanaians demanding Nigerians must leave their country.
In a post on Facebook, he urged Igbos abroad to to return and invest in their homeland.
Taking to his page, he wrote:
“Ndi Igbo come back home and invest in Igbo land.
If you’re facing rejection on foreign soil, it’s not a sign to fight anybody, it’s a sign to return home.
We have wandered for too long.
Home is calling.
Our ancestors and spirits in Igbo Land are calling us to return home and develop home.
A new dawn has come in Igbo land.
It’s time to return home.
Ana amalu mma si na uno wee puo ilo,” he wrote.
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Lifestyle
Nigeria Is Under A Demonic Spell And Witchcraft – Pastor Enenche Laments

Enenche claimed that the nation is under an evil spell amid the economic hardship ravaging the country.
Senior Pastor of Dunamis International Gospel Centre, Dr. Paul Enenche has revealed the problem of Nigeria.
According to him, the country is under a demonic spell and witchcraft.
He said that’s the reason why the people have continued to tolerate suffering and hardship.
“There’s a blanket of sorcery and darkness over this nation; an evil spell making people tolerate what should provoke outrage,” he wrote.
In a post on his official X account on Thursday, the cleric highlighted the economic struggles faced by many Nigerians, noting that increasing numbers of church members now line up after services not for spiritual counseling or prayer, but for basic needs such as rent, school fees, food and medical bills.
“People are suffering. Pastors are drained. Members now queue after service not for prayer, but for help,” he lamented.
He also criticized political leaders for what he described as their insensitivity and failure to address the dire situation across the country.
“Yet, the leaders act as though nothing is wrong. This is not normal. It is witchcraft. A spell of patience in captivity. A demonic tolerance of suffering.”
Calling for divine intervention, Enenche declared: “Let every evil spell over this land be broken! Let those misruling with arrogance and mocking the people’s pain face divine judgment. They shall not see the celebration of their wickedness.”
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Lifestyle
Spirits Are Angry – Actor, Yul Edochie Talks About Why There Are Too Many Early And Untimely De@ths In Nigeria

According to him, he recently traveled from Anambra to Abia state and was taken aback by the number obituaries he saw of young people.
Actor Yul Edochie has expressed concern over the alarming rate of early and untimely de@ths in Nigeria.
According to him, he recently travelled from Anambra to Abia state and was taken aback by the number obituaries he saw of young people.
He attributed the early de@ths to the ancestors and spirits being angry because many have abandoned traditional ways of worship.
He said the society needs spiritual cleansing and every African needs to return to traditional religion.
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