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Nigerian beggars in Ghana
If you think there are too many beggars on your street, please take heart. A trending video is showing a massive throng of Nigerian children and women being deported from Ghana where they were found ...
In what has been described as a smart move that surprised many fans, admirers and colleagues, notable Hausa musician has tied the knot with his personal assistant, Aisha Huamira, who also doubles ...
Listeners of the popular Voice Of America (VOA) Hausa radio service in Northern Nigeria and other neighbouring countries have turned to other stations for their news updates after the radio ...
Jamshedpur: Young Indians (Yi) Jamshedpur Accessibility Vertical, in collaboration with the Tata Steel Sports Department, organized ‘Hausala 2.0,’ a unique sports festival for specially-abled ...
Niger State Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago has urged northern governors to reconsider the region’s education system by adopting Hausa as the primary language of instruction in schools. He ...
The Governor of Niger State, Mohammed Bago, has called for the adoption of Hausa as the medium of instruction in primary and secondary schools across Northern Nigeria. Bago said this move would ...
There is a boom of Hausa female literature writers today, and it is all thanks to the social and digital media platforms. According to siblings and founders of the Hausa International Books & Arts ...
Hausa Koko is a local porridge common among the Hausa people. The people in Ghana are virtually Muslims and are mostly situated or found in the Northern part of the country. What is the English ...
Consumers of millet porridge, known popularly as ‘Hausa Koko’, are paying more to have a satisfying breakfast, as the cost of the main production ingredient - millet – surges. Vendors say it ...
An international multimedia bilingual journalist, Alhassan Bala, has launched a Hausa fact-checking platform called ‘Alkalanci’ (The Arbiter). The platform focuses primarily on fact-checking ...
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: (Speaking Hausa). AKINWOTU ... UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: (Through interpreter) The kids kept crying because they could see I was about to leave them behind.