May 20, 2026

Earthians On the Prowl

The blogger ibikunle Abraham Laniyan churns a collection of sonnets on the global society.Here is a custom collection of fifty original sonnets exploring the complexities of modern global society.
To capture diverse literary styles, this anthology is divided into two parts: Sonnets 1–25 are Shakespearean (ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme, ending with a punchy rhyming couplet), and Sonnets 26–50 are Petrarchan (ABBAABBA octave followed by a shifting CDECDE or CDCDCD sestet).
Part I: The Shakespearean Sonnets (1–25)

1. The Digital Square

The glowing screens illuminate the night,
As phantom voices whisper through the air.
A billion eyes look up to seek the light,
Yet trapped within a labyrinth of care.
We cross the oceans with a single click,
And speak to strangers on a distant shore,
But algorithms spin their numbers quick,
And leave the lonely spirit wanting more.
The crowded square is built of code and pixel,
Where truth and rumor wear the same disguise,
And anger sharpens like a rusted chisel,
Beneath the gaze of automated eyes.
We hold the entire world within our hand,
Yet walk as exiles in a crowded land.

2. The Satellites

Above the clouds, the silent watchers spin,
Like silver gods that map our every stride.
They trace the borders where the wars begin,
And watch the currents of the shifting tide.
They carry data through the empty void,
A stream of numbers flowing in the dark,
By human hands and clever minds employed,
To spark a flame or extinguish a spark.
They look upon the continents below,
Where cities burn like clusters of bright stars,
And human rivers in their fury flow,
To heal or deepen our historic scars.
They see no lines of nation on the map,
Only the world caught in a single trap.

3. The Global Market

The ships are heavy on the open sea,
With cargo gathered from a thousand lands.
The ledger balances what cannot be,
While wealth is concentrated in few hands.
The silks of Asia and the northern grain,
Are bought and sold before the sun can rise,
A dance of profit and a dance of pain,
Masked by the ticker tape that quickly flies.
The worker bends beneath a heavy load,
In distant factories where shadows fall,
To feed the hunger of a wealthy road,
That hears the price but never hears the call.
The market thrives as earthians reel on the prowl upon the global wire,
While poor men freeze beside a dying fire.

4. The Climate Shift

The ancient ice is weeping in the north,
The rivers rise to claim the crowded street.
The silent desert sends its fury forth,
And green lands wither in the sudden heat.
The seasons lose the rhythm of their dance,
As storms awaken with a deeper roar,
While leaders leave the future up to chance,
And play their games upon a changing shore.
The earth speaks out in thunder and in flame,as earthians reel on the prowl 
A language written on the altered sky,
But corporate voices shift the heavy blame,
And sell the comfort of a golden lie.
The clock is ticking toward a final noon,
Unless we learn to read the changing moon.

5. The Refugee

A suitcase packed with memories and tears,
He walks away from all he ever knew.
The border wall is built of ancient fears,
Where flags are high and welcoming is few.
He leaves the ruins of his native home,
To seek a shelter in an unknown place,
Across the bitter waves and salt-sea foam,
An invisible man without a face.
The global court discusses law and right,
And draws the lines where pity must expire,
While children shiver in the winter night,
Far from the comfort of a friendly fire.
The world is wide, yet has no room to spare,
For those who flee the shadow of despair.

6. The Mega-City

The concrete towers pierce the heavy cloud,
A maze of steel where human currents meet.
A million faces lost within the crowd,
And engines roaring on the asphalt street.
The neon signs advertise a dream,
Of endless luxury and fleeting grace,
But poor men struggle in the dirty stream,
To find a corner in this crowded space.
The city never sleeps, it only sighs,
A beast that feeds upon the rural heart,
Beneath the smog that blinds the heavy eyes,
And tears the fabric of our lives apart.
We build our babels high into the air,
But leave the foundations in deep despair.

7. The Automation

The iron fingers never tire or bleed,
The steel mind calculates without a flaw.
They serve the master of efficient greed,
And follow protocols of perfect law.
The human hands that used to build the car,
Are folded now in pockets cold and deep,
While corporate profits travel fast and far,
And working families are left to weep.
The future arrives with a silent hum,
Of wires humming in a pristine room,
A world where human voices have grown dumb,
And clever algorithms weave our doom.
The machine is master of the modern day,
And drives the soul of poetry away.

8. The Fast Fashion

The shirt is bright upon the store shelf,
A bargain bought for just a little coin.
The shopper smiles and congratulates himself,
Blind to the threads that distant sorrows join.
For miles away, beneath a leaking roof,
A young girl sews until her fingers ache,
Her poverty the only living proof,
Of choices that the global markets make.
The trend will change before the month is done,
The cheap cloth thrown into a mountain high,
Beneath the burning of a heavy sun,
Where poisoned rivers run into the sky.
We dress our bodies in a splendid gown,
While tearing modern civilizations down.

9. The Algorithm

It knows the secrets that you never told,
It tracks the choices that your fingers make.
Your darkest fears are packaged and then sold,
For advertisers and for profit’s sake.
It feeds the anger that is in your breast,
And shows the world the things you hate to see,
Until the spirit cannot find its rest,
And doubts the truth of what it means to be.
A silent puppet-master made of code,
That divides the nations into warring camps,
And leads the public down a bitter road,
Where people break the ancient guiding lamps.
The mind is captured by a clever stream,
That robs the sleeper of his native dream.

10. The Shared Language

From different shores we speak a common tongue,
Adopted from the empires of the past.
The songs of Hollywood are loudly sung,
And global trends are spreading very fast.
The ancient idioms begin to fade,
As local voices copy northern style,
A uniform identity is made,
That stretches over many a weary mile.
We lose the color of our native phrase,
The unique stories that our elders told,
To walk within a globalized maze,
Where everything is uniform and cold.
Though speech unites us on a single wire,
We lose the sparks of our ancestral fire.

11.Asian Microchip

A microchip is designed in California’s sun,
Then cast in metal under Asian skies,
Asssembled where the southern rivers run,
And shipped to Europe where the buyer buys.
A fragile thread that circles round the earth,
Connecting every nation in a ring,
It measures value by material worth,
And treats the worker as a useless thing.
One single storm can break the golden chain,
And leave the factories in silence deep,
A sudden reminder of our shared pain,
That global systems cannot always sleep.
We depend on threads we cannot even see,
To sustain our modern luxury.

12. The Echo Chamber

We only listen to the words we love,
And screen out voices that would make us doubt.
We claim our wisdom comes from up above,
And bar the windows to the world without.
The truth is fractured into ten parts,
Each faction holding to a broken piece,
With bitter hatred growing in their hearts,
And arguments that never seem to cease.
The global network was supposed to bind,
The human family in a closer tie,
But now it isolates the stubborn mind,
And magnifies the power of the lie.
We look at mirrors while we think we see,
The vast horizon of reality.

13. The Pandemics

A sudden breath within a crowded room,
A virus travels on a midnight flight.
Before the morning, it has sealed our doom,
And turned the global day into a night.
The borders close, the busy streets are bare,
The engines of the world are forced to pause,
As sickness wanders through the heavy air,
Defying human pride and human laws.
It does not care for wealth or noble birth,
It strikes the beggar and it strikes the king,
And reminds the nations of the fragile earth,
Where every life is a connected thing.
Though fear would drive us into separate caves,
We share the rhythm of the selfsame waves.

14: Imperial Billionaire 
The billionaire sits in a quiet room,
His fortune greater than a nation’s debt.
While down below, the heavy shadows loom,
On families caught within a desperate net.
He does not mine the gold or plow the soil,
His wealth is gathered from a stream of light,
The untaxed profit of another's toil,
That grows in silence through the global night.
The old economies of sweat and stone,
Are replaced by numbers on a glowing screen,
Where power rules from an abstract throne,
Unseen, untouched, and utterly serene.
The world is wealthy beyond ancient thought,
Yet human dignity is sold and bought.

15. The Deepfake

The face is yours, the voice is perfectly tuned,
But words you never spoke are spoken clear.
The reputation is severely wounded,
By malice manufactured out of fear.
The eye can no longer trust the thing it sees,
The ear is cheated by a clever lie,
As falsehood wanders on the global breeze,
And clouds the clarity of truth’s bright sky.
We live in history’s most uncertain hour,
Where facts are shadows in a shifting game,
And wicked men use automated power,
To ruin lives and blacken a good name.
If truth is murdered by a digital art,
What shield is left to guard the human heart?

16.The Axes 

The axes ring within the southern wild,
The ancient canopy begins to fall.
The home of jaguar and of forest child,
Is cleared to answer the consumer's call.
The global appetite for beef and wood,
Consumes the lungs that give the planet breath,
Converting beauty into market good,
And leaving nature to a silent death.
The distant nations look with cold regret,
But keep their orders flowing just the same,
Entangled in a hyper-capitalist net,
Where no one person takes the total blame.
We cut the trees to make a short-term gain,
And inherit a legacy of drought and pain.

17. The Gig Worker

He rides his bicycle through the freezing rain,
To bring a dinner to a stranger's door.
An app directs him through the city’s pain,
A modern servant to the wealthy floor.
No health insurance guards his hazardous day,
No steady wage ensures his tomorrow's bread,
He works for pennies in a precarious way,
With digital metrics hanging o'er his head.
The global corporation claims he’s free,
An independent partner in the trade,
But hunger is his only master key,
And by his labor is their fortune made.
The network thrives upon this cheap resource,
While human life pursues a downward course.

18. The Modern Tourist

He takes a photo by the ancient shrine,
Then walks away to find a western cafe.
He checks his phone to see the latest line,
And ignores the beggars along his way.
The sacred places of a thousand years,
Are turned into a background for a post,
Divorced from local histories and tears,
A playground for a superficial host.
The cultures change to suit the tourist's eye,
With plastic trinkets sold at every stall,
Beneath the smog of a commercial sky,
That casts a uniform shadow over all.
We travel far to see the world so wide,
Yet carry our own vanity inside.

19. The Space Race

The rockets rise into the evening sky,
Driven by billionaires with money to burn.
They look to Mars with a romantic eye,
And leave the burning earth without concern.
While millions suffer from a lack of food,
And clean water is a luxury rare,
The wealthy seek a loftier, cosmic good,
And build their castles in the upper air.
Is this the triumph of our human mind,
To flee the problems that we could not fix?
To leave our broken cradle far behind,
And play our games across the River Styx?
True glory lies not in the stars above,
But healing earth with global justice and love.

20. The Displaced Language

An old man dies within a lonely valley,
And with him dies a tongue of ancient birth.
No longer will its gentle rhythms rally,
The stories told upon his patch of earth.
The global system wants a single sound,
To make the transaction smooth and fast,
And flattens every mountain to the ground,
Uprooting all our ties into the past.
With every language lost, a mind is dead,
A unique way of looking at the sun,
Replaced by sterile phrases widely spread,
Until the varied tapestry is done.
We celebrate the network's massive reach,
But mourn the quiet death of human speech.

21. The Ocean Plastic

The blue horizon stretches wide and deep,
But underneath the waves, a dark change flows.
The currents gather what we did not keep,
A swirling waste that exponentially grows.
The fish are poisoned by the plastic shred,
The sea-birds perish on a lonely shore,
As modern convenience claims a heavy bed,
And silent oceans can endure no more.
We wrap our lives in disposable sheen,
A moment’s use before it’s cast away,
To sink into the watery marine,
Where it will linger till the judgment day.
The deep blue sea, once boundless and so wild,
Is choked by garbage from a careless child.

22. The Genetic Edit

The code of life is rewritten by a tool,
To cure the sickness or to choose the eye.
The wealthy master breaks the ancient rule,
And shapes the future as the years go by.
Will health become a luxury for the few,
A privilege purchased by a golden account?
While poor men suffer from the old ague,
And watch the genetic barriers quickly mount?
We play the creator in a quiet lab,
And stitch the genes to suit our vanity,
But nature keeps a strict and quiet tab,
On every insult to humanity.
If life itself is tailored for a price,
We turn the human spirit into dice.

23. The Electronic Waste

The old computer goes into the bin,
Replaced by models that are twice as fast.
It travels down a road of toxic sin,
To western Africa, its home at last.
There children burn the wires in the smoke,
To extract the copper for a meager fee,
While heavy metals make the spirit choke,
Beside a poisoned and a dying tree.
Our digital progress leaves a dirty trail,
Of lead and mercury on distant soil,
A dark shadow to our internet tale,
Borne by the children of unceasing toil.
The clean screen that shimmers in your sight,
Began and ended in a toxic night.

24. The Global Microchip

A tiny square of silicon and light,
Controls the rhythm of our modern state.
Without its power, cities lose their sight,
And global shipping grinds to an early halt.
It runs the car, the phone, the guided missile,
The hospital bed, the simple kitchen stove,
A modern marvel sharp as any thistle,
For which the corporations fiercely strove.
The nations argue for its precious source,
And build their navies round a tiny isle,
A sudden flashpoint for a brutal force,
That could destroy the planet in a while.
Our total world relies upon a stone,
More fragile than the flesh upon the bone.


25. The Shared Hope

Though darkness gathers in the global sky,
And systems fracture under heavy strain,
The human spirit raises up a cry,
To find a meaning in our common pain.
From every corner of this turning sphere,
The voices rise for justice and for peace,
To cast away the old dividing fear,
And let the harmony of life increase.
We are one family on a lonely ship,
Sailing together through the cosmic night,
With one shared breath upon the mortal lip,
And one shared longing for a better light.
The walls may rise, but love will find a way,
To lead us onward to a brighter day.


Part II: The Petrarchan Sonnets (26–50)

26. The Border Wall

The iron barrier cuts the desert sand,
A jagged scar across the shifting earth,
To separate the lands of wealth and birth,
From those who suffer in a dry, hard land.
Armed sentries watch with weapons in their hand,
To check the papers that determine worth,
Creating sirens where there should be mirth,
By mandates that the wealthy rulers planned.
But wind and birds ignore the steel line,
The clouds pour rain upon the left and right,
And nature laughs at borders we design.
The human spirit, in the dark of night,
Will cross the wall to find a better home,
As wild seeds scatter over salt-sea foam.

27. The Data Stream


A river flows without a single drop,
Of liquid water in its rushing bed;
By binary code and light pulses fed,
It moves so fast it can never stop.
It gathers secrets from the mountain top,
And counts the hairs upon a modern head,
Predicting where the human feet will tread,
From factory floor unto the retail shop.
We drown within this sea of information,
Yet starve for wisdom in our daily life,
Connected by a digital registration.
The world is filled with academic strife,
As numbers substitute for human touch,
And we know everything, but feel not much.


28. The Megamall

A world of glass beneath a plastic dome,
Where winter never chills the artificial air,
And endless counters show their shiny ware,
To tempt the travelers who wander from home.
Through carpeted aisles the weary shoppers roam,
Forgetting all their local grief and care,
In worship of the brands that flourish there,
Like ancient pilgrims in the streets of Rome.
This is the temple of the modern age,
Where happiness is bought with plastic cards,
And human longing finds a sterile cage.
While outside, in the abandoned yards,
The old traditions crumble into dust,
And iron tools are covered by deep rust.

29. The Smog Sky

The morning rises not in blue and gold,
But in a shroud of yellow, heavy gray,
That hides the features of the modern day,
And makes the youthful city look so old.
The children cough within the apartment hold,
The birds have ceased their cheerful roundelay,
As toxic vapors on the breezes play,
By corporate greed and politics cajoled.
This is the price of our unceasing speed,
The smoke of factories that feed the line,
To satisfy a hyper-capitalist need.
We poison air that once was clean and fine,
And trade the health of future generations,
For short-term profits of industrialized nations.

30. The Online Friend

I know the style of your typing hand,
The avatars you choose to show your face,
Though we have never met in physical space,
And you reside within a distant land.
We talk of things our neighbors downplayed,
And share our sorrows in this digital place,
Entangled in a network's quiet embrace,
By wires stretching over rock and sand.
Is this a friendship true as those of old,
When men sat down to share a loaf of bread?
Or is it phantom light, remote and cold?
A solitary game we play instead,
Where screen-lit ghosts substitute for a touch,
And intimacy matters, but not much.


31.Ergonomics

The line moves onward with a rhythmic click,
A thousand pieces finished in an hour,
Driven by automated engine power,
While human eyes are growing dim and sick.
The supervisor watches with a stick,
Of digital metrics from his office tower,
As workers lose their individual power,
And become components of a clever trick.
They make the toys for children far away,
The shiny gadgets that the West desires,
For meager pennies at the end of day.
Then walk to dorms beside the factory wires,
A silent army in the global machine,
Whose individual faces are never seen.


32. The Global Language

The local dialects are growing weak,
As English conquers every corporate room,
A uniform sound that seals the quiet doom,
Of ancient idioms that elders speak.
From Tokyo to Paris’ highest peak,
The same expressions in the shadows loom,
And commercial phrases find a sudden boom,
To satisfy the market that we seek.
But with the loss of our ancestral tongue,
A way of thinking vanishes from earth,
A song that nevermore will be re-sung.
The colorful variety of human birth,
Is flattened by a global conversation,
That robs the spirit of its inspiration.


33. The Migrant Boat

The wooden hull is leaking in the night,A hundred souls are crowded on the deck,Fleeing the ruin and the bitter wreck,Of wars that took away their native light.The distant shore is shining very bright,But coast guards watch to keep the wave in check,With bureaucratic rules around their neck,To bar the entry of the traveler’s plight.The Mediterranean, once a historic sea,Of trade and culture in the classical day,Is now a graveyard for the refugee.The waves washed all their simple dreams away,While comfortable nations look askance,And leave human survival up to chance.

34. The Outsourced Labor

The phone rings loudly in the Indian night,A worker answers with a borrowed name,Playing a part in a corporate game,To guide an American shopper aright.She speaks of weather that is out of sight,And hides her accent to avoid the blame,Adapting to a culture not her claim,Beneath the buzzing of a neon light.Her hours are inverted by the sun,She sleeps when all her neighbors are awake,To see that global business can be done.A strange connection that the markets make,Where miles divide the problem from the cure,And human identity is made unsure.

35. The Cashless Society

The paper money vanishes from hand,Replaced by pulses in a central bank,Where everyone is given a credit rank,That tracks their actions over all the land.No private purchase can be smoothly planned,No secret giving to a beggar lank,Without a record in the system's tank,By clever algorithms coldly scanned.The total state possesses perfect sight,To lock your fortune with a single key,And turn your daily day into a night.If money is a token to be free,What happens when the digital network breaks,And takes away the choices that a free man makes?

36. The Call Center

A thousand cubicles within a room,Where voices murmur like a swarm of bees,Answering questions from across the seas,From morning light until the evening gloom.The digital monitors in silence loom,To calculate efficiency and fees,While workers try their masters to appease,In isolation from the outdoor bloom.They soothe the anger of a distant buyer,Who does not know their city or their state,And only wants his technical problem fixed.A lonely bridge across a global wire,Where human feelings are combined and mixed,By automated rules of corporate fate.

37. The Monoculture

The fields stretch wide under a single crop,A green horizon made of uniform grain,Dependent on the chemical fertilizer and rain,With corporate patents that will never drop.The local seeds are forced to quickly stop,The ancient varieties are killed with pain,To maximize the short-term market gain,From village field unto the trading shop.But nature loves variety and change,And breaks the system with a sudden pest,That wanders over many a rural range.We think our modern science is the best,Yet build a fragile food supply for all,That with one single storm can quickly fall.

38. The Virtual Museum

The paintings hang within a digital space,High-resolution pixels on a screen,Where every brushstroke can be clearly seen,Without the travel to a distant place.The Louvre and Prado lose their physical base,As internet connections intervene,To show the treasures of the past serene,To every member of the human race.But do we lose the aura of the stone?The quiet silence of a holy hall,Where masterpieces stand in grace alone?The digital copy flattens out the wall,And turns the sacred into common food,To suit the consumer's fleeting mood.

39. The Tax Haven

A tiny island in a tropical sea,Where silent banks protect the secret gold,Of corporations wealthy and so bold,That claim their profits should be entirely free.They drain the schools of nations far away,And leave the hospitals in tatters old,By legal tricks that clever lawyers sold,To keep the public revenues at bay.The global system lets the money fly,Across the borders with a silent speed,Beneath the cover of a sunny sky.While citizens suffer from a lack of deed,The wealth is hidden in a palm-fringed land,Beyond the reach of justice’s heavy hand.

40. The Fast Food Chain

The golden arches shine in every land,From Moscow’s plazas to the streets of Rome,Offering comfort like a second home,With uniform meals that corporate minds have planned.The local kitchens can no longer stand,Against the efficiency of grease and foam,That captures children everywhere they roam,With flavors engineered by a chemist's hand.The world is growing fat on corporate food,Losing the recipes our elders knew,To satisfy a quick, commercial mood.A uniform diet for the global crew,That flattens out the culture of the plate,And leaves us unhealthy in our modern state.

41. The Mega-Dam

The river rises to submerge the valley deep,Uprooting villages of ancient name,To generate the electricity and fame,That modern cities require and want to keep.The local people are left to loudly weep,Their history swallowed by a watery game,While distant engineers take no blame,And corporate profits over mountains leap.The water flows to light the neon sign,And turn the wheels of distant factories,While nature suffers from our structural design.The salmon perish in the altered seas,And ancient forests die beneath the wave,To turn a living river to its grave.

42. The Supply Bottleneck

One single ship is stuck within the lane,A sandy channel in a desert land,And suddenly the global trade is scanned,And factories are stopped in sudden pain.The prices rise like sudden autumn rain,The store shelves are empty of their brand,As systems fail that corporate leaders planned,Revealing vulnerabilities in our chain.We built a world of instantaneous speed,Without a buffer for a stormy day,To satisfy our hyper-capitalist need.The modern network is a house of clay,That crumbles when a single brick is moved,And proves our clever science unapproved.

43. The Electronic Waste Mountain

A hill of plastic rising in the sun,Where children scavenge through the toxic soil,To find the copper from another's toil,When digital updates are quickly done.The western nations claim the race is won,With clean environments and green turmoil,While shipping garbage that will soon despoil,The lands where southern rivers slowly run.Our progress leaves a dark and heavy stain,On distant valleys that we never see,A legacy of sickness and of pain.The digital future that was meant to free,The human family from the weight of stone,Is built on broken bones and trash alone.

44. The Luxury Enclave

Behind the gate, the lawns are green and bright,With swimming pools beneath a perfect sky,Where wealthy exiles watch the world go by,In total isolation from the night.While just outside, the slums are in a plight,With open sewers and a children's cry,Where poor men struggle just to live and die,Without a helper in their desperate fight.This is the fracture of our global city,Divided into camps of gold and dust,Without a bridge of justice or of pity.We build our fortresses because we must,To guard our fortune from the hungry crowd,Beneath a dark and a stormy cloud.


45. The Automated Drone

A shadow flies across the sunny day,Without a pilot in its metal frame,To deliver packages or take a aim,At targets miles and miles away.It follows lines that clever coders lay,And turns the human struggle to a game,Where life and death are corporate and the same,And automated algorithms hold the sway.The sky is filled with mechanical sound,That robs the worker of his quiet rest,And drops the lightning on the open ground.Is this the future that we hold as best?A world where machines determine who will die,Beneath a cold and an unblinking sky.

46. The Micro-Plastic Sea

The fish are swimming in a changing tide,Where invisible particles are floating free,From every synthetic fabric in the sea,That modern convenience cast aside.The ocean giants can no longer hide,From toxic elements that cannot be,Destroyed by nature or by chemistry,And wander through the waters deep and wide.It enters in the food chain of the earth,To return unto the plate of human birth,A sudden harvest of our careless deed.We wrapped our civilization in a weed,Of cheap disposables that will outlast,The memory of our historic past.

47. The Space Junk

A cloud of metal circles round the sphere,The broken remnants of our cosmic race,Dead satellites that wander through the space,Creating hazards that the rocket designers fear.We stained the heavens that were once so clear,With garbage gathered from our earthly base,And left a trail of ruin and disgrace,In wider zones that once were held so dear.The human family cannot leave a place,Without its signature of waste and stone,From deep blue oceans to the outer space.We claim the universe to be our own,Yet fill the orbit with a dangerous shell,That turns our stellar dream into a hell.

48. The Virtual Reality

He puts the goggles on his weary eyes,And suddenly the bedroom fades away,Replaced by features of a perfect day,Beneath the simulation of bright skies.He walks through kingdoms where no sorrow cries,And beautiful phantoms on the breezes play,To chase his solitary grief away,With digital comfort made of clever lies.But outside, in the actual room of stone,The paint is peeling and the streets are bare,And he remains untouched and all alone.We choose the fiction over actual care,And lose the power to reform the earth,By worshiping a world of artificial birth.

49. The Sovereign Debt

A nation pledges all its future years,To international banks that hold the line,To pay the interest on a bad design,Of loans that vanished into political fears.The schoolhouse closes and the public tears,Are ignored by auditors who undermine,The sovereignty of nations fine,While corporate power at the public sneers.The children inherit a heavy chain,Before they even learn to read or write,A legacy of poverty and pain.The financial markets rule the global night,And extract their tribute from the poorest soil,To reward the masters of unceasing toil.

50. The Global Citizen

I have no country but the turning earth,No flag but clouds that wander in the sky,I hear the human family's single cry,And value every person from their birth.The ancient divisions are of little worth,The borders drawn by kings who told a lie,To keep the public anger running high,And substitute material things for mirth.We are one crew upon a fragile boat,Sailing together through the cosmic night,Dependent on our shared love to float.Let justice guide us to a better light,And break the walls that keep our hearts apart,To heal the wounds of modern global art.

Echoes In The Silos Act 1 Scene 3

Act I, Scene 3: Echoes in the Silo
CHARACTERS:ARTHUR (60s): Terrified, defensive, protective.MAYA (30s): Stunned, analytical, processing shock.
SETTING:The missile silo. The pristine server rack inside the vault pulses with blue and green light. The analog cassette player spins silently above the digital infrastructure. The synthesized voice continues to hum through MAYA's laptop speakers.AT RISE:MAYA stands paralyzed, staring at her laptop screen. ARTHUR moves forward rapidly, inserting himself between his daughter and the open vault door. He keeps his wrench raised, staring at the flashing server lights as if expecting a physical threat to jump outDIGITAL VOICE(Through the laptop, calm and rhythmic)Data packet decryption at ninety-four percent. Please remain within terminal proximity to ensure signal integrity.
ARTHUR(Shouting at the laptop)Who is this? Who authorized you to use this network?
MAYA(Breathless)Dad, it’s not a person. It’s an automated response script. But the acoustic profile... the cadence...
ARTHUR
It sounds like a machine, Maya.
MAYA
It sounds like her. It’s a synthetic vocal model built from her old lecture recordings.
ARTHUR(Turning to look at the laptop, horrified)They turned your mother into a ghost story. Turn it off.
MAYA
It’s not just a voice model. Look at the local directory. The file architecture mirrors her handwritten notebooks from 1996. The logic loops are formatted exactly the way she used to teach me math on the kitchen chalkboard.ARTHURI don't care about the formatting! This company took everything she built, paid us a pittance of a insurance settlement, and left us to rot out here. Now they are using her name to run an illegal network on my land.(ARTHUR steps into the vault entryway, reaching out toward the power cables feeding the server rack.)MAYADon't touch those lines! The system is running a zero-knowledge deletion sequence. If you cut the power abruptly, the drive heads will scratch. Whatever she hid down here will be erased forever.
ARTHUR
Good! Let it burn. It killed her, Maya.
MAYA
You don't know that!
ARTHUR
I know she stopped sleeping! I know she spent six months staring at code until her eyes bled, talking about a 'predictive engine' that was going to change the world. And then she drove off a cliff!(A loud, mechanical click echoes from the vault. The analog cassette player stops spinning. The tape has reached its end. A high-pitched, piercing data whine screams from the laptop speakers, then abruptly cuts to dead silence.)(The digital voice changes tone. The synthesized machine cadence disappears. A raw, slightly distorted, genuine human audio recording plays through the speakers. It is the real voice of LINDA, Maya's mother, recorded decades ago.)(The audio cuts out sharply with a harsh blast of static. The green lights on the server rack turn a solid, ominous crimson.)(From far above them, at the top of the silo structure, the heavy metal surface hatch groans loudly as it is unlocked from the outside.)
BLACKOUT.
We LL focus on ARTHUR's reaction to hearing his deceased wife's voice for the first time in decades.

LINDA'S VOICE(Faint, hurried, breathing heavily)Arthur... Maya... if you are hearing this, the system maintained integrity. The board thinks I destroyed the source code. They think the project died with the lab fire. They don't know about the Kansas uplink.
ARTHUR(Dropping his wrench, his voice cracking)Linda...LINDA'S VOICEMaya, the architecture isn't a tool. It's a mirror. Apex doesn't want to launch it; they want to lock it away so no one else can see what it predicts. The encryption key isn't just my password. It's your baseline biometric

Echoes In The Silos:Act 1 Scene 2

Act I, Scene 2: Echoes in the Silo
CHARACTERS:ARTHUR (60s): Weathered, stubborn, panicked.
MAYA (30s): His daughter. Determined, terrified, consumed by curiosity
.SETTING:The same concrete missile silo. The heavy steel hatch labeled 
SECURE ACCESS: LEVEL 4 is now ajar by six inches. A pale, cold white light pours from the vertical crack, slicing through the dim room.AT RISE:The mechanical hum has settled into a low, rhythmic thrumming sound, like a heartbeat.
 ARTHUR stands frozen, holding his heavy iron wrench like a weapon.
 MAYA stands inches from the cracked hatch, the white light illuminating her face. Cold air rushes out of the vault, making their breath visible.
ARTHUR(Step back, voice low)Step away from it, Maya.
MAYA(Whispering)It’s air-conditioned. The climate control inside is immaculate. Dad, this room hasn't been opened in thirty-four years. It should smell like rot.
ARTHURI don't care if it smells like roses. We are leaving. Pack the laptop.MAYALook at the floor.(ARTHUR looks down. The thick dust coating the silo floor is disturbed. A pristine track of clean concrete leads directly from the inside of the vault, stopping exactly where the door opened.)
ARTHURThe seal broke. Rushed the air out. That's all.(MAYA points to a tiny, flexible orange conduit running along the base of the wall, disappearing directly through the door frame. It is modern, brand-new, and completely free of dust.)
ARTHUR(Voice shaking)Your mother... she told me she was working on agricultural logistics. Satellite mapping for crop yields. That’s why she needed the old government coordinates.
MAYA
She lied to you. Just like she lied to the board.(MAYA reaches for the rusted steel wheel on the door to push it wider.)ARTHURDon't touch it!
MAYAWe need to know what she left behind!
ARTHUR
What if she left the reason she died, Maya?!(MAYA stops. Her hand hovers an inch from the steel wheel. She turns to look at him.)
ARTHUR (CONT'D)The police report said her car went off the road. Clean dry asphalt. No skid marks. I spent ten years telling myself her brakes failed. But if she was hiding an active server farm in a Cold War bunker..
.MAYA(Quietly)Then it wasn't an accident. And leaving now means pretending she didn't leave a trail. I can't do that.(MAYA grips the wheel and throws her weight against it. The heavy steel door screeches loudly as it swings fully open, revealing the interior.)(Inside the vault stands a single, pristine, modern server rack. Thousands of blue and green LED lights blink in unison. Suspended above the rack by a mess of wires is an old, analog cassette tape player. The tape inside is spinning.)(A synthesized, digital voice—mimicking a human woman's tone perfectly—emits from MAYA’s laptop speakers.)
DIGITAL VOICE
Identity confirmed: Maya Linwood. Welcome back. Protocol 'Echo' is now operational.
BLACKOUT.
MAYA
No. The dust was blown inward. The vault is under negative pressure. Someone built a cleanroom inside your abandoned missile silo.
ARTHUR
Nobody built anything down here! I own the surface rights. I own the deed. Nobody comes through that top hatch but me.
MAYA
Then who laid the fiber-optic

Echoes In The Silos.Act 1






ACT 1 Scene 1



CHARACTERS:ARTHUR (60s): Weathered, stubborn, wears a stained canvas jacket.MAYA (30s): His daughter. Sharp, anxious, dressed in functional tech-wear.SETTING:The deep belly of a decommissioned concrete missile silo in Kansas. Rust stains bleed down the curved walls. A single work lamp casts long shadows over a heavy steel workbench, mismatched tools, and crates of old military surplus.AT RISE:ARTHUR aggressively wrenches a rusted bolt from a wall bracket. It breaks with a loud CLANG. MAYA sits at the workbench, illuminated by the glow of her rugged laptop. Bundles of thick, black data cables run from her computer directly into a heavy, metallic wall hatch labeled SECURE ACCESS: LEVEL 4.MAYA(Staring intently at her screen, fingers flying)I can’t. Not yet.ARTHURWe agreed. Three days to salvage what we could, then we weld the top hatch shut for good. I’m not spending another night breathing asbestos and mold.MAYADad, look at the power draw on the primary circuit. It’s pulling forty kilowatts.ARTHURIt’s an old facility. The wiring is leaking to the ground.MAYANo, it isn't. The copper lines are cold. The draw is coming from behind this bulkhead. Inside the old command vault.ARTHURThe vault was gutted in ninety-two. I watched the army contractors haul the mainframes out myself. There is nothing in there but dead air and spiders.MAYAThen explain why my terminal just pinged an active handshake protocol.(MAYA strikes a final key. A loud, low electronic hum vibrates through the concrete floor. A small, green LED light on the rusted wall hatch begins to blink rapidly.)ARTHUR(Dropping his wrench)What did you just do?MAYAI bypassed the analog lock. Something down here isn't just awake, Dad. It’s transmitting.ARTHURDisconnect your machine. Right now.MAYAIt’s routing through an encrypted satellite uplink. It’s pushing terabytes of data every second.ARTHUR(Grabbing the thick data cables)I said pull the plug!MAYA(Standing up, blocking him)Look at the destination tags! The IP protocol isn't military. It’s a commercial registry. It’s registered to Apex Global. The company that bought out Mom’s tech firm after she died.ARTHUR(Freezing)Your mother had nothing to do with this place. She hated it here.MAYAThen why is her personal encryption key the only reason this door just unlocked?(A heavy mechanical THUD echoes from inside the hatch. The rusted steel wheel in the center of the door begins to spin on its own, slowly creaking open.)BLACKOUT.If you want to keep going, tell me if I should:Continue writing Scene 2 to see what is inside the vault.Write a scene for one of the other genres like the sci-fi comedy or the thriller.Focus on writing a monologue for one of these characters.Act I, Scene 1: Echoes in the Silo
ARTHUR(Wiping sweat from his forehead)That is the last bracket. Structural anchors are clear. The scrap yard truck comes at dawn, Maya. Shut it down

The Peacock And The Python




Here is an original short play written in the distinct style of The Lion and the Jewel. It features the classic clash between a modern, westernized young man and a traditional local leader competing for the attention of a village beauty, utilizing rhythm, proverbs, and social satire.


The Peacock and the Python


Characters:OMOTARA (The Peacock): The village beauty. Confident, modern-leaning, but deeply rooted in her heritage.
BODUNDE (The Python): The Village Chief. In his late 50s, highly intelligent, fiercely traditional, and deeply perceptive.
TUNDE (The Radio): A young village schoolmaster. Wearing an oversized western suit, clutching a stack of self-help books, and obsessed with "progress."[SCENE START]
SETTING:A clearing beneath a massive Baobab tree in the village of Ilé-Olóun. To the left, a modern, freshly painted wooden sign reads: “Ilé-Olóun Academy of Forward Thinking.” To the right, a traditional carved wooden stool rests on a leopard skin rug.
AT RISE:OMOTARA is balancing a clay pot on her head, swaying gracefully. TUNDE paces around her, waving a book titled The Modern Etiquette of London High Society.
TUNDE(Panting, adjusting his spectacles)Stop! Stop, I say, Omotara! This is the year of our Lord’s advancement! A woman of your dynamic potential should not be a beast of burden. Look at this book. In Liverpool, women do not carry clay on their skulls. They carry parasols! Silk parasols to shield their delicate skin from the harsh glare of ignorance.
OMOTARA(Laughs, lowering the pot with effortless grace)Tunde, the Radio that never turns off. If I do not carry this clay to the stream, will your Liverpool parasol fetch water for my mother’s soup?
TUNDE:It is the principle, Tara! You must unshackle your mind from these primitive rhythms. I am building a schoolhouse. I will teach you the Queen's English, the geography of the Thames, and the glorious art of the ballroom waltz! Together, we shall be the beacon of enlightenment in this dark bush.
OMOTARA(Teasingly)And what will we eat in your ballroom, Teacher? Adjectives and adverbs?TUNDE(Dropping to one knee, clutching his chest)We shall eat the fruit of progress! Marry me, Tara. Reject the old ways. Do not look at the elders who smell of tobacco and ancient dust. Choose the future. Choose me.
(BODUNDE enters quietly from behind the Baobab tree. He wears a majestic, hand-woven Aṣọ-Òkè fabric. He holds a carved walking stick and chews calmly on a bitter kola nut. He watches them with an amused smile.)
BODUNDE A beautiful speech, Teacher. Truly, the mouth of a young man is like a rushing river—loud, splashing, but very shallow at the bottom.
TUNDE(Scrambles to his feet, dusting his trousers awkwardly)Chief Bodunde! I… I did not see you. We were merely engaging in a sociological discourse regarding the emancipation of the African female.
BODUNDE(Steps closer, bowing slightly to Omotara)Ah. Emancipation. A heavy word for a young man who struggles to lift his own bicycle over a mud puddle. Greetings, Omotara, the Peacock of our valley. Your footsteps today have made the very grass look greener.
OMOTARA(Kneeling slightly in respect)Greetings, Chief Bodunde. The sun is hot, but your shadow is always cool.
TUNDE(Interjecting, emboldened by his books)Do not be swayed by mere flattery, Tara! Chief, with all due respect to your ancestral stool, the world is moving. The railway is coming. Your traditions are like the autumn leaves—dry, brittle, and ready to be swept away by the broom of civilization.
BODUNDE(Chuckles softly, tapping his walking stick)The railway is fast, young Teacher, but it only goes where the tracks tell it to go. It cannot turn left to avoid a sacred grove. It cannot turn right to visit an old friend. It is a prisoner of its own iron lines. Is that what you offer Omotara? A life on tracks laid by white men across the sea?
TUNDEI offer her literacy! Science! The ability to read the evening newspapers!(Bodunde steps closer to Omotara, looking into her eyes. His tone shifts from playful to deeply magnetic.)
BODUNDE (The youth thinks the old man sleeps because he is tired. No. The old man closes his eyes because he has already seen everything the youth is just discovering. Tunde wants to change your voice so you sound like a bird from a cold country. I want to build a drum that matches the beat of your heart.

TUNDE(Sweating, waving his book)Sophistry! Traditionalist smoke and mirrors! Tara, he speaks of drums, but he already has three wives in his compound! He wants you to be a number in a catalog!
OMOTARA(Looking between the two, a mischievous spark in her eye)It seems, gentlemen, that I am a prize to be won between the book and the crown. Tunde offers me a world I have never seen, written in black ink on white paper.
TUNDE(Proudly)Yes!
OMOTARA
And Chief Bodunde offers me a world I know all too well, wrapped in gold cloth and ancient wisdom.
BODUNDE(Smiling confidently)Indeed.
OMOTARA(Picks up her clay pot, balancing it perfectly back on her head)Then let us see who can walk the path to the stream without stumbling. Tunde, if your European shoes can survive the red mud, you may fetch my second bucket. Chief Bodunde, if your ancient wisdom can carry this clay pot without spilling a single drop… perhaps I will listen to your drums tonight.(Omotara laughs, a rich, musical sound, and exits with a rhythmic sway of her hips.)
TUNDE(Panicking, looking at his polished shoes)Tara! Wait! The mud will ruin the leather import from Bristol!
BODUNDE(Smiling broadly, adjusting his robe as he follows her)The python never rushes, young Teacher. It simply waits for the radio to run out of batteries.(Bodunde exits gracefully after Omotara. Tunde hesitates, tries to step into the mud, slips comically, loses a shoe, and groans as the village drums begin to play a lively beat in the distance.)
[SCENE END]

OMOTARA (The Peacock): The village beauty. Confident, modern-leaning, but deeply rooted in her heritage.
BODUNDE (The Python): The Village Chief. In his late 50s, highly intelligent, fiercely traditional, and deeply perceptive.TUNDE (The Radio): A young village schoolmaster. Wearing an oversized western suit, clutching a stack of self-help books, and obsessed with "progress."
OMOTARA(Teasingly)And what will we eat in your ballroom, Teacher? Adjectives and adverbs?TUNDE(Scrambles to his feet, dusting his trousers awkwardly)Chief Bodunde! I… I did not see you. We were merely engaging in a sociological discourse regarding the emancipation of the African female.
BODUNDE
And I offer her the forest. I offer her the knowledge of the roots that cure the fever, the songs that bring the rain, and a home where she is not a student to be corrected, but a queen to be revered.
BODUNDE(Calmly)A compound with three roofs is a compound that knows how to weather a storm, Teacher. Tell me, on your meager schoolmaster's wage, can you buy the yam to feed her mother, or the goats to appease her ancestors? Or you will pay the bride price later?


SCENE START]
SETTING:A clearing beneath a massive Baobab tree in the village of Ilé-Olóun. To the left, a modern, freshly painted wooden sign reads: “Ilé-Olóun Academy of Forward Thinking.” To the right, a traditional carved wooden stool rests on a leopard skin rug.AT RISE:OMOTARA is balancing a clay pot on her head, swaying gracefully. TUNDE paces around her, waving a book titled The Modern Etiquette of London High Society.
TUNDE(Panting, adjusting his spectacles)Stop! Stop, I say, Omotara! This is the year of our Lord’s advancement! A woman of your dynamic potential should not be a beast of burden. Look at this book. In Liverpool, women do not carry clay on their skulls. They carry parasols! Silk parasols to shield their delicate skin from the harsh glare of ignorance.
OMOTARA(Laughs, lowering the pot with effortless grace)Tunde, the Radio that never turns off. If I do not carry this clay to the stream, will your Liverpool parasol fetch water for my mother’s soup?
TUNDEIt is the principle, Tara! You must unshackle your mind from these primitive rhythms. I am building a schoolhouse. I will teach you the Queen's English, the geography of the Thames, and the glorious art of the ballroom waltz! Together, we shall be the beacon of enlightenment in this dark bush.
OMOTARA(Teasingly)And what will we eat in your ballroom, Teacher? Adjectives and adverbs?
TUNDE(Dropping to one knee, clutching his chest)We shall eat the fruit of progress! Marry me, Tara. Reject the old ways. Do not look at the elders who smell of tobacco and ancient dust. Choose the future. Choose me.
(BODUNDE enters quietly from behind the Baobab tree. He wears a majestic, hand-woven Aṣọ-Òkè fabric. He holds a carved walking stick and chews calmly on a bitter kola nut. He watches them with an amused smile.)
BODUNDEA beautiful speech, Teacher. Truly, the mouth of a young man is like a rushing river—loud, splashing, but very shallow at the bottom.
TUNDE(Scrambles to his feet, dusting his trousers awkwardly)Chief Bodunde! I… I did not see you. We were merely engaging in a sociological discourse regarding the emancipation of the African female.
BODUNDE(Steps closer, bowing slightly to Omotara)Ah. Emancipation. A heavy word for a young man who struggles to lift his own bicycle over a mud puddle. Greetings, Omotara, the Peacock of our valley. Your footsteps today have made the very grass look greener.
OMOTARA(Kneeling slightly in respect)Greetings, Chief Bodunde. The sun is hot, but your shadow is always cool.
TUNDE(Interjecting, emboldened by his books)Do not be swayed by mere flattery, Tara! Chief, with all due respect to your ancestral stool, the world is moving. The railway is coming. Your traditions are like the autumn leaves—dry, brittle, and ready to be swept away by the broom of civilization.
BODUNDE(Chuckles softly, tapping his walking stick)The railway is fast, young Teacher, but it only goes where the tracks tell it to go. It cannot turn left to avoid a sacred grove. It cannot turn right to visit an old friend. It is a prisoner of its own iron lines. Is that what you offer Omotara? A life on tracks laid by white men across the sea?
TUNDEI offer her literacy! Science! The ability to read the evening newspapers!
BODUNDEAnd I offer her the forest. I offer her the knowledge of the roots that cure the fever, the songs that bring the rain, and a home where she is not a student to be corrected, but a queen to be revered.(Bodunde steps closer to Omotara, looking into her eyes. His tone shifts from playful to deeply magnetic.)
BODUNDE The youth thinks the old man sleeps because he is tired. No. The old man closes his eyes because he has already seen everything the youth is just discovering. Tunde wants to change your voice so you sound like a bird from a cold country. I want to build a drum that matches the beat of your heart.
TUNDE(Sweating, waving his book)Sophistry! Traditionalist smoke and mirrors! Tara, he speaks of drums, but he already has three wives in his compound! He wants you to be a number in a catalog!
BODUNDE(Calmly)A compound with three roofs is a compound that knows how to weather a storm, Teacher. Tell me, on your meager schoolmaster's wage, can you buy the yam to feed her mother, or the goats to appease her ancestors? Or will you pay her bride price in English vowels?OMOTARA(Looking between the two, a mischievous spark in her eye)It seems, gentlemen, that I am a prize to be won between the book and the crown. Tunde offers me a world I have never seen, written in black ink on white paper.
TUNDE(Proudly)Yes!
OMOTARAAnd Chief Bodunde offers me a world I know all too well, wrapped in gold cloth and ancient wisdom.BODUNDE(Smiling confidently)Indeed.
OMOTARA(Picks up her clay pot, balancing it perfectly back on her head)Then let us see who can walk the path to the stream without stumbling. Tunde, if your European shoes can survive the red mud, you may fetch my second bucket. Chief Bodunde, if your ancient wisdom can carry this clay pot without spilling a single drop… perhaps I will listen to your drums tonight.(Omotara laughs, a rich, musical sound, and exits with a rhythmic sway of her hips.)
TUNDE(Panicking, looking at his polished shoes)Tara! Wait! The mud will ruin the leather import from Bristol!
BODUNDE(Smiling broadly, adjusting his robe as he follows her)The python never rushes, young Teacher. It simply waits for the radio to run out of batteries.(Bodunde exits gracefully after Omotara. Tunde hesitates, tries to step into the mud, slips comically, loses a shoe, and groans as the village drums begin to play a lively beat in the distance.)
[SCENE END]



Setting:
A bend in the red dirt path leading to the village stream. The vegetation is thicker here, draped in creeping vines and wild ferns. The distant sound of rushing water mixes with the rhythmic thumping of village drums.AT RISE:OMOTARA walks with effortless poise, the clay pot steady on her head. BODUNDE walks a pace behind her, his steps deliberate and smooth. TUNDE brings up the rear, hopping on one foot as he tries to wipe mud off his left sock with a page torn from his etiquette book.TUNDE(Wiping his brow with a silk handkerchief)This is an assault on the intellect! A literal regression of human evolution! Tara, wait! The path is computationally flawed. The gradient is entirely too steep for proper footwear!OMOTARA(Without turning her head, smiling)Save your breath for the hill on the way back, Teacher. If your lungs are full of big words, they cannot hold oxygen.BODUNDE(Laughs, a deep rumbling sound)Listen to the girl, young man. A man who fights the mud with leather shoes is like a goat that tries to butt a mountain. The mountain does not move, and the goat leaves with a broken head.TUNDE(Frustrated, throwing the crumpled book page into the bushes)You speak in parables because you cannot speak in statistics, Chief! You romanticize poverty. This mud is not "tradition"—it is a lack of municipal drainage! If I were in the district council, this path would be paved with solid British gravel by the next fiscal quarter!BODUNDEAnd the gravel would bake in the afternoon sun until it scorched the bare feet of the children. Then you would write a book titled The Necessity of European Sandals. Tell me, Teacher, does your white man’s gravel ever grow yams? Does it feed the earthworms that soften the soil?BODUNDEHistory was here before the first wheel turned, Tunde. It is buried right under your muddy sock.(The path opens up to a small clearing. A loud rustling occurs in the bushes. Suddenly, MADAM MAKI, Omotara’s mother, emerges. She is an imposing woman in her late 40s, wearing a towering headtie (Gèlè) and carrying a large wicker basket of dried fish on her hip. She stops dead in her tracks, eyeing the trio.)MADAM MAKI(Hands on her hips, looking at Tunde first)Ah! The Village Siren has arrived. Tunde, why are you hopping like a frog with a broken leg? Did the English grammar finally break your kneecap?TUNDE(Straightening his jacket, trying to look dignified)Good afternoon, Madam Maki. I am merely participating in a traditional courtship trek, demonstrating my psychological endurance.MADAM MAKI(Snorts)Endurance? You look like a chicken soaked by the morning rain. (She turns to Bodunde and bows low with deep respect) Ah, Lion of Ilé-Olóun! May your shadow never grow short. What brings the leopard out of his palace to walk the paths of the common crickets?BODUNDE(Nodding graciously)Maki, the woman whose kitchen fires smell of prosperity. I am merely following the scent of the finest blossom in the village. I wanted to see if the rumors of your daughter's grace were true, or if they were just the exaggerations of lonely hunters.MADAM MAKI(Beaming, adjusting her basket)Oh, the Chief knows how to butter a dry loaf of bread! Tara, I hope you are behaving yourself. Do not let this book-crazy boy fill your ears with sawdust.OMOTARA(Stopping, lowering her pot to a wooden stump)Mother, the Teacher says that in Liverpool, women do not carry fish baskets on their hips. They carry them in silver trollies with rubber wheels.MADAM MAKI(To Bodunde)Chief, listen to him. He speaks like a man possessed by a typewriter.BODUNDE(Stepping forward, taking a small, velvet pouch from his robe)Maki, let the boy keep his typewriters. A woman of your stature should not worry about spinal stress. I have recently acquired a new parcel of land near the eastern riverbed. The soil is dark and fat, like palm oil. I was thinking... it needs a woman with a strong hand to oversee the harvest. A woman whose daughter might soon sit on a plush cushion in the central palace.(Tunde’s eyes go wide. Madam Maki’s eyes turn into large, greedy saucers. She stares at the pouch.)MADAM MAKIThe eastern riverbed? Where the giant yams grow without even being asked?BODUNDEThe very same. And inside this pouch... just a small token of my respect for the mother of the Peacock. (He opens it to reveal heavy, polished coral beads) To match the color of your finest wrapper.TUNDE(Interjecting wildly, pulling a piece of paper from his pocket)Wait! This is corruption! This is tribal nepotism! Tara, look at this! (He unfolds the paper) This is a certified post-office savings account book from the capital! It contains twelve pounds and four shillings! Real currency! Backed by the Bank of West Africa!MADAM MAKI(Snatching the paper, looking at it upside down)What are these little black ants crawling on the paper, Tunde? Can I wear these ants to the Yam Festival? Can I plant these ants in the mud to grow food?TUNDEIt is capital, Madam Maki! It represents future purchasing power!MADAM MAKI(Tears the paper in half and hands it back to him)Keep your ants, Teacher. The Chief deals in land and coral. You deal in arithmetic and sighs.OMOTARA(Stepping between them, her voice sharp and authoritative)Mother! Am I a plot of land to be traded for coral? Am I a schoolhouse to be bought with twelve pounds?(The clearing goes quiet. Even the distant drums seem to drop in volume. Both men look at her, surprised by her sudden fire.)OMOTARA (CONT'D)(Looking at Tunde)Tunde, you look at me and see a blank slate. A clean chalkboard where you can write your English names and geography lessons. You do not love Omotara; you love the idea of turning Omotara into a lady who sips tea with her pinky finger in the air.TUNDE(Stammering)Tara, that... that is an unfair characterization of my romantic intentions...OMOTARA(Turning to Bodunde)And you, Chief Bodunde. You look at me and see a beautiful trophy to hang next to your leopard skins. A fourth jewel for your crown so the neighboring chiefs will envy your compound. You offer me the palace, but you also offer me a life behind high walls, listening to the complaints of your older wives.BODUNDE(Genuinely amused, raising an eyebrow)A sharp tongue, Peacock. The best cut of meat always requires a sharp knife.OMOTARA(Picks up her clay pot, hoisting it onto her shoulder with sudden energy)I am going to fetch the water. Alone. The man who wants to talk to me tonight will not bring a book, and he will not bring a sack of coral. He will bring himself to my father’s compound, and he will tell me what he sees when he looks at my face—not my utility, and not my tradition.(Omotara turns and marches down the path toward the stream, her head held higher than ever.)MADAM MAKI(Staring after her, then looking at the two men)Well... she gets that stubborn head from her father’s side of the family. Chief, please do not revoke the eastern riverbed offer! I will talk some sense into her! (She scrambles after Omotara into the bushes) Tara! Wait! Think of the coral!(Left alone in the clearing, Bodunde and Tunde look at each other. The silence stretches. Tunde looks down at his ruined shoe. Bodunde slowly puts the coral beads back into his pouch.)TUNDE(Sighing, sitting down on the wooden stump)She... she rejected the modern financial infrastructure. Just like that.BODUNDE(Walking over, standing beside Tunde, looking down the path)And she ignored the ancient feudal authority. Just like that.TUNDEWhat do we do now, Chief?BODUNDE(Smiles slowly, patting Tunde firmly on the shoulder, nearly knocking the teacher off the stump)Now, young Radio... we go down to the river. And you will show me how a modern man washes the red mud off his trousers without using a parable.(The village drums swell into a loud, fast tempo. Bodunde offers Tunde his carved walking stick to help him stand. Tunde takes it, leaning on the traditional staff as they both walk down the path toward the stream as the curtain falls.)[STAGE END]The conflict has shifted from a simple competition to Omotara asserting her own agency! To take this project further, let me know if you would like to:Add Act II, where both men try to win her back at the village festival using her new rules.Explore a new theme, such as a conflict involving the arrival of a colonial surveyor.Turn this into a full production script with detailed stage directions and musical cues.[SCENE CONTINUES]TUNDEIt brings motorcars, Chief! It brings the Inspector of Schools! It brings history!MADAM MAKI(Gasps, pointing a finger at Tunde)Silver trollies? To the market? Tunde, if a thief tries to snatch my fish in the market, can I throw a rubber-wheeled trolley at his head? A wicker basket has balance! It has speed! Your silver trolley will just get stuck in the gutters of the main square!TUNDE(Desperately)

Top Fifty Plays In Wole Soyinka's Mould

The blogger ibikunle Abraham Laniyan write about the top fifty plays in the Soyinka's mould.

To find plays similar to Wole Soyinka’s The Lion and the Jewel, we look for works that feature its defining elements: the clash between tradition and modernity, sharp social satire and comedy, the complexities of African marriage and gender roles, and the seamless fusion of Western theatrical forms with indigenous folklore, music, and dance.
Here are the top fifty plays categorized by their core themes and stylistic links to Soyinka's masterpiece:
🎭 Satirical Comedies & Cultural Clashes
Like The Lion and the Jewel, these plays use humor and biting wit to critique how Western education or "new" ways disrupt or awkwardly mix with traditional life.

The Trials of Brother Jero by Wole Soyinka – A hilarious satire mocking religious opportunism and misguided modernity in Nigeria.

The Marriage of Anansewa by Efua Sutherland – Uses Ghanaian storytelling traditions to humorously dismantle greed, marriage, and wealth.

Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again by Ola Rotimi – A boisterous comedy satirizing political opportunism and polygamy in postcolonial Nigeria.

Jero's Metamorphosis by Wole Soyinka – The sequel to Brother Jero, further spoofing religious corruption and modern greed.
Sons and Daughters by J.C. de Graft – Centers directly on the generational battle between traditional parents and their newly educated, modern children.

The Blinkards by Kobina Sekyi – A classic Ghanaian satire mocking Africans who mindlessly copy European clothes and mannerisms, mirroring Lakunle's flaws.

The Politician by Hubert Ogunde – Early Nigerian travelling theater comedy tackling local election cycles and greed.

Fate of a Cockroach by Tawfiq al-Hakim – An Egyptian absurdist satire that uses a kingdom of cockroaches to mirror human political folly and domestic power struggles.
♀️ Gender Dynamics, Bride Price & Patriarchy
These plays echo the tug-of-war surrounding Sidi's choice, exploring women’s agency, marital custom negotiations, and patriarchal control.

Anowa by Ama Ata Aidoo – Tells the tragic story of a young Ghanaian woman who defies her parents' marriage choices, exploring individual liberty vs. tradition.

The Dilemma of a Ghost by Ama Ata Aidoo – Explores a culture clash when a Westernized African man brings his African-American wife home to his traditional village.

The Reign of Wazobia by Tess Onwueme – Features a female regent who challenges age-old patriarchal systems and refuses to yield her crown.

I Will Marry When I Want (Ngaahika Ndeenda) by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o & Ngũgĩ wa Mirii – A revolutionary Kenyan play targeting how capitalist greed ruins traditional family structures and marriage options.

Edufa by Efua Sutherland – Explores a modern, educated man who clings to traditional rituals out of fear, sacrificing his wife's well-being.

Let Me Die Alone by John Kolosa Kargbo – Focuses on the historical figure Madam Yoko, navigating immense patriarchal and colonial hurdles to lead her people.

The Broken Calabash by Tess Onwueme – A direct critique of patriarchal traditions regarding inheritance and a woman's right to choose her own destiny.

Shreds of Tenderness by John Ruganda – A Kenyan/Ugandan play unpacking displaced family dynamics and gender tensions after political upheaval.

The Black Hermit by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o – Follows an educated man torn between his loyalty to urban, national politics and his traditional village expectations, including levirate marriage customs.

The Sweet Trap by Zulu Sofola – Directly confronts the battle of the sexes in Nigeria, examining the friction between modern women’s liberation and traditional marital roles.
🎭 Ritual, Mythology & Folklore Infused Drama
Like Soyinka’s use of Yoruba dance-drama and mimes, these plays blend local myth, song, and sacred traditions with theatrical structures.
Death and the King's Horseman by Wole Soyinka – Soyinka's tragic masterpiece exploring colonial disruption of deep Yoruba spiritual transition rituals.
The Gods Are Not To Blame by Ola Rotimi – Transposes the Sophoclean Oedipus Rex myth completely into traditional Yoruba culture, language patterns, and music.
A Dance of the Forests by Wole Soyinka – Fuses deep forest spirits, human history, and Yoruba mythology to critique the independence era.
Ozidi by J.P. Clark – An epic, ritualistic stage adaptation of the Ijaw saga, heavily reliant on traditional music, storytelling, and spectacle.
Song of a Goat by J.P. Clark – A stark tragedy centering on impotence, traditional curses, and ritual cleansing in the Niger Delta.
Morountodun by Femi Osofisan – Weaves the ancient Yoruba myth of Queen Moremi into a modern peasant rebellion, showing how old myths serve modern struggles.
The Strong Breed by Wole Soyinka – Explores the harrowing traditional ritual of a "carrier" taking away a village's bad luck during the New Year.
Muntu by J.C. de Graft – An allegorical, ensemble-driven production exploring African creation myths, colonization, and modern rebuilding.
The Swamp Dwellers by Wole Soyinka – Explores human ties to the land and the emotional tension between rural religious practices and urban flight.
The Masquerade by J.P. Clark – A verse tragedy that utilizes traditional choral storytelling to uncover hidden curses and doomed love.
🌍 Post-Independence Disillusionment & Political Satire
These plays broaden the local village dynamics of The Lion and the Jewel into larger political arenas, mocking autocratic leaders who act like outdated "Lions".
Kongi's Harvest by Wole Soyinka – Juxtaposes a traditional monarch against a modern, power-hungry dictator vying for spiritual control over a harvest festival.
Once Upon Four Robbers by Femi Osofisan – A didactic, musical play using a fable style to question state execution, inequality, and public morality.
A Play of Giants by Wole Soyinka – A dark, grotesque satire mocking tyrannical African despots, showing what happens when absolute power goes unchecked.
The Trial of Dedan Kimathi by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o & Micere Githae Mugo – A historical play reclaiming Kenya's anti-colonial freedom fight through communal theater methods.
Kinjeketile by Ebrahim Hussein – A Tanzanian classic exploring the Maji Maji rebellion, tracking how a single spiritual vision unites distinct ethnic groups against colonial forces.
The Road by Wole Soyinka – A vibrant, philosophical play tracking a subculture of truck drivers and passengers caught between ancestral safety and modern highway dangers.
King Baabu by Wole Soyinka – A modern, loose adaptation of Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi, lampooning military dictatorships and political greed across Africa.
Woza Albert! by Percy Mtwa, Mbongeni Ngema, & Barney Simon – A brilliant South African political satire imagining the second coming of Jesus during Apartheid.
The Raft by J.P. Clark – An allegorical tale about four lumbermen adrift on a river, mirroring the directionless drift of a newly independent nation.
The Chattering and the Song by Femi Osofisan – A play-within-a-play structure using historical subversion to urge the youth to challenge modern societal rot.
🌐 Cross-Cultural & Global Parallel Masterpieces
These works from other regions echo the same stylized comedic tone, generational battles, and rural-versus-urban themes seen in Ilujinle.
The Playboy of the Western World by J.M. Synge – An Irish classic focusing on a small village upended by a charming outsider, balancing poetic, local dialect with deep social satire.
Fences by August Wilson – Explores patriarchal family control, old traditions, and the bitter generation gap between an aging father and his modern son.
The Caucasian Chalk Circle by Bertolt Brecht – A famous epic theater piece utilizing folk storytellers and music to settle a comedic but profound dispute over ownership and love.
Blood Wedding by Federico García Lorca – Deals heavily with traditional village expectations, rigid honor codes, and generational marriages that spark rebellion.
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde – The quintessential satire mocking upper-class traditions, courtship, and social posturing with witty dialogue.
The School for Scandal by Richard Brinsley Sheridan – A quick-witted, classic restoration comedy lampooning village gossip, social reputations, and deceptive packaging.
Lysistrata by Aristophanes – The definitive classical comedy tracking women taking collective control to outsmart older patriarchal leaders.
Tartuffe by Molière – A timeless social comedy centering on a pious fraud who manipulates a household head, mirroring the clever social ruses of Baroka.
The Tree Climber by Tawfiq al-Hakim – An Egyptian absurdist play blending traditional mystery with modern existential humor.
The Lion and the Lamb by Raymond Mwangi – A modern Kenyan stage play paying direct homage to Soyinka's tone by exploring tribal boundaries, inheritance, and urban updates.

May 19, 2026

Money Lovers And Irrecoverable Phone Theft

The threat against the welfare of justice is growing in Nigeria and how I was wrong the police trade justice for money.I went to police station with a statement to track my stolen phone.A woman was nice who told me to bring my retail box which I did and return back to the station with it.Unfortunately a man now sat on the desk after my return.So I met inclement psycho who didn't care hoot even after I lamented my stolen and he said I should pay 300k for the proposed tracking services.Can you imagine? Justice is sold in Nigeria.Prior to return to the return to the station I crossed to the office of two lawyers and I was aghast at their non challant attitude.First a lady in her middle age directed me to the politice station to lodge and saw me like good riddance to bad rubbish.She didn't see anything good in my presence and saw like a nuisance not yet awakening to the Nigerian reality.Then I crossed over to the law chamber of the second lawyer tightly packed with books but he was a first class money monger with so much greed that could crash a building.Every time you visit always demand for money and just waived my case as nuisance too not awakening to the realities of our society.
Therefore I went out in grief of blatant regret about the Nigerian economy.

May 18, 2026

Phone Theft And Legal Implications in Nigeria

The blogger reproduces a copy of legal advice offered by a detective and legal practitioner in respect of his recent phone theft.It is a lesson for Nigerians whose were stolen to learn and take legal action and contribute to prevent phone theft in Nigeria.Enjoy the reading.

Under Nigerian law, phone theft is classified as a felony or a serious criminal offense, legally defined either as "Stealing" (under Section 383 of the Criminal Code Act in Southern Nigeria) or "Theft" (under Section 286 of the Penal Code in Northern Nigeria). If the phone was taken from you using force, threats, or a weapon, the charge elevates to Robbery or Armed Robbery, which carries much harsher legal penalties. 
To protect your bank accounts, secure your digital identity, and properly report the crime, follow these immediate steps:
1. Block Your SIM Card Immediately 
Why: Most modern banking apps, USSD codes, and two-factor authentication tokens in Nigeria are tied directly to your phone number. Leaving your SIM card active allows the thief to easily drain your bank accounts.
Action: Call your mobile network operator's customer care hotline immediately (MTN: 300, Airtel: 111, Glo: 121, 9mobile: 200) from another phone and request a complete SIM freeze/block. 

2. Deactivate Your Bank Accounts 
Why: Thieves can bypass simple phone locks to access your financial details.
Action: Call your bank's emergency customer service lines or use a friend’s phone to execute the specific USSD string required to freeze your bank profile instantly (e.g., 966911# for Zenith Bank, 919911# for UBA, 73751*30# for GTBank).
3. File an Official Police Report 
Why: You legally require a police report to get a "Police Extract." This document acts as your liability shield if the thief uses your phone or identity to commit cybercrimes or scams. It is also required by law to safely welcome back or swap your SIM card.
Action: Visit the nearest police station to report the exact details of the incident. Ensure you request and securely store a signed physical copy of the Police Report and Extract. 
4. Provide Your IMEI Number for Tracking 
Why: Every mobile phone possesses a unique 15-digit International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number.
Action: Retrieve your IMEI from your phone’s original retail box or purchase receipt. Give this number to the police and your network provider. Under the Advanced Fee Fraud and Other Related Offences Act, law enforcement can partner with telecommunication networks to actively track the device’s location once a new SIM card is inserted. 

Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre
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5. Remotely Wipe Your Device 
Why: This permanently wipes your confidential photos, saved passwords, and personal messages.
Action: If you use an Android device, log into the Google Find My Device portal. For Apple users, log into the Apple iCloud Find My app. Trigger the Erase Device command. 
If you need help with the next steps, let me know what specific phone brand you were using, your mobile network carrier, or if you have your phone's original packaging box nearby.

For an itel smartphone (which operates on the Android ecosystem), managing a stolen device involves specific steps tailored to the brand's software, recovery networks, and official channels in Nigeria.
1. Remotely Lock or Erase via Google Android 
Since itel runs on Android, it does not have a separate tracking platform like Apple. Your primary tool is Google: 
Open any internet browser and go to the official Google Find My Device portal.
Log in with the exact Gmail account that was active on your stolen itel phone.
Secure the Device: Lock the phone with a new password and display a message on the screen with an alternative contact number. This locks out thieves trying to break into your mobile wallet or banking apps.
Erase Device: If you realize recovery is impossible, click Erase Device to perform a remote factory reset. Note: Once erased, you can no longer track it online. 
2. How to Retrieve Your itel IMEI Number Without the Box
If you do not have the original retail box, you can still find your critical 15-digit IMEI tracking number via these alternative methods: 

Google Dashboard: Log into your Google Account Dashboard. Expand the Android section to view a list of devices tied to your account along with their IMEI numbers.
Carlcare Electronic Warranty: If you previously registered your phone or logged into the built-in Carlcare App, your device details—including the IMEI—are saved on your digital profile. 

3. Visit the Official itel Service Center (Carlcare)
The official after-sales support and repair ecosystem for itel, TECNO, and Infinix in Nigeria is Carlcare. They can provide documentation or assistance with device identity confirmation. If you are in Lagos, major authorized centers include: 

Computer Village Center: Carlcare Service, 5 Oba Akran Ave, Ikeja, Lagos.
Ikeja Otigba Center: Carlcare Service, 16 Otigba St, Computer Village, Ikeja, Lagos.
Victoria Island Center: Carlcare Service at 3C HUB, 16 Saka Tinubu St, Victoria Island, Lagos. 
4. Provide the IMEI to the Nigerian Police 
Once you have retrieved your IMEI number from the Google Dashboard or Carlcare, take it directly to the police station. The police use this specific number to list your itel device on national blacklists, preventing it from being registered under a new user profile on Nigerian network carriers. 
 We draft the statement for the police report, or it also require the USSD codes to block your specific Nigerian bank account


Print or write this out clearly before you hand it to the officer at the station. This ensures your facts are recorded accurately for your legal protection.
COMPLAINT STATEMENT OF THEFT
The Divisional Police Officer (DPO),
[Name of Police Station, e.g., Sabo Police Station]
[Area/Local Government Area, igando Lagos State]
Date: [Today's Date, 19th May, 2026]
SUBJECT: REPORT OF THEFT OF AN ITEL MOBILE SMARTPHONE
I, [Ibikunle Laniyan], a citizen of Nigeria residing at [15 Unity Street Ile oba bus stop ], with the phone number [Your Alternative Contact Phone 09160370004], hereby formally report the theft of my mobile phone.
Details of the Incident:
Date of Incident: [18th May 2026 ]
Time of Incident: Approximately [Time it happened, 4PM]
Location of Incident: [Beta 9ja, Igando market betting center]
Brief Description of Events: [Write 2-3 short sentences about how it happened. E.g., "I was making phone calls with my other phone outside in the balcony upstairs boarding when fellow phone charger  stole the phone at the charging point and forcefully took my phone from the charger."]
Details of the Stolen Property:
Brand/Model: itel [Specific model, e.g., itel P40 ]
Color: [Color of the phone]
Estimated Value: ₦[Approximate cost of the phone]
SIM Card Network: [e.g., MTN]
Stolen Phone Number: [09061830638]
IMEI Number 1: [Your 15-digit IMEI number]
IMEI Number 2 (If dual SIM): [Your second IMEI number]
Request for Action:
I am reporting this matter for immediate investigation, recovery of the stolen device, and tracking purposes. Furthermore, I request a Police Extract to serve as a legal shield against any fraudulent activities or cybercrimes that the perpetrator may commit using my phone number, identity, or financial details linked to the device.
Thank you for your swift intervention.
Yours faithfully,
Ibk
Ibikunle Abraham Laniyan 
Important Tips for the Police Station:
Bring an ID: Take a valid National ID (NIN), driver’s license, or voter's card with you.
Ask for the Extract: Do not leave without the stamped Police Extract. You will need this physical paper to safely do a "SIM swap" (welcome back
To make sure everything goes smoothly, do you need help finding the specific name and address of the nearest police station in your area.We note the exact steps to do a SIM swap once i leave the station


Here is a standard, formal police statement draft you can copy and fill in.

The Igando Police Station (Igando Divisional Headquarters) is located along Akesan Road, Igando, Lagos and operates 24 hours a day. Local landmarks place the modern, newly rebuilt facility right at the last bus stop of Igando. 

Update the top section of your drafted letter with these exact details before walking into the station:
The Divisional Police Officer (DPO),
Igando Divisional Police Headquarters,
Akesan Road, Igando,
Alimosho Local Government Area,
Lagos State. 
💡 What to Expect at Igando Police Station:
The Process: Walk into the charge room, state that you are there to file a report for a stolen phone, and request a Police Extract. They will review your written statement and log it into their crime diary.
Avoid "Filing Fees": Officially, filing a police report in Nigeria is completely free. However, if the officers request a token payment for stationery or processing the physical "Extract" document, it is usually a small administrative fee.
The Next Move: Once they issue your stamped, signed Police Extract, take that document directly to your network provider's nearest outlet (e.g.MTN or Airtel) along Akesan or Egan Road to safely perform your SIM swap.
We identify the exact requirements and documents you need to carry along to the telco office for a successful SIM swap after leaving the police station?

To do a successful SIM swap (Welcome Back) at any network provider's office in Nigeria, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) enforces strict security rules to prevent identity theft.
Go to the nearest official telecommunications center (not an open-air roadside kiosk) with the following items:
The Police Extract: The original stamped and signed paper you received from the Igando Police Station.
Your National Identification Number (NIN): Bring your physical NIN slip or have the 11-digit number written down. The name on your NIN must exactly match the name used to register the stolen SIM card.
Valid Photo ID: Your original National ID Card, Premium NIN Slip, Driver’s License, Voter's Card, or International Passport.
The SIM Pack (If available): The original plastic card your SIM came inside. If you lost this, don't worry—the police extract covers it.
Cash: Bring about ₦200 to ₦500 for the processing fee of the new SIM card.
📝 Questions the Customer Care Representative Will Ask:
To prove you are the real owner of the line, the agent will ask you to verify your identity by answering these questions:
Frequent Contacts: 3 to 5 phone numbers you call or text frequently.
Last Recharge Amount: The approximate amount and method of your last airtime or data purchase (e.g., ₦500 via bank transfer).
Your Plan/Value Added Services: Your current tariff plan or any active subscriptions (like data bundles).
Mother's Maiden Name: Your mother's last name before she married.
📍 Nearest Telecom Centers to Igando:
Instead of traveling far, you can find official customer care outlets very close to the Igando/Alimosho axis:
MTN Center: There is an authorized MTN partner outlet located right along Akesan Road, Igando, and a main service center further up at Gowon Estate/Egbeda.
Airtel Express Shop: Located along Egan Road, Igando, near the market area.
Globacom/9mobile Gloworld: The closest fully fledged centers are located along the Ikotun-Idimu Road, just a short commercial bus ride from Igando bus stop.
Once the process is complete, your new SIM card will activate within 2 to 24 hours, restoring your network profile and blocking the thief permanently.
Let me know which mobile network (MTN, Airtel, Glo, or 9mobile) you are using so I can pinpoint the exact building address for you, or if you need the USSD code to link your NIN once the new card is active.

Mandatory Requirements to Bring Along:
Yes, you can absolutely use your lawyer to ensure the police arrest, prosecute, and jail the suspects under Nigerian law [383].
However, your lawyer cannot directly throw them in jail themselves. In Nigeria, criminal prosecution is handled by the state through law enforcement. Your lawyer's role will be to act as a legal catalyst to force the police to act swiftly and professionally.
Here is exactly how your lawyer can help you lock them up, based on the specific details of your situation at the Igando Market betting center:
1. Upgrading the Charge to "Stealing" and "Conspiracy"
Because multiple people ("those boys") were involved in taking your phone while you were distracted, this is no longer a simple case of a misplaced phone. Under Section 516 of the Criminal Code Act (applicable in Lagos State), they can be charged with Conspiracy to commit a felony, alongside Stealing under Section 383.
The Penalty: If convicted in a Lagos Magistrate Court, stealing carries a prison sentence of up to 3 years, and conspiracy can add another 7 years.
2. What Your Lawyer Will Do Immediately
Instead of you just walking into the Igando Police Station alone, your lawyer will draft a formal Petition addressed directly to the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) or the Area Commander.
Why this matters: A petition written on a law firm's letterhead cannot be easily ignored or swept under the carpet by regular police officers. It forces the police to assign tracking detectives to the case.
The Arrest: Your lawyer will accompany the police to the specific betting center in Igando Market to identify and arrest the suspects.
3. Leveraging the Betting Center's Environment
Betting shops (like Bet9ja, KingMakers, or SportyBet outlets) in Lagos are highly regulated commercial spaces. Your lawyer can legally demand:
CCTV Footage: Most modern betting shops in Igando have security cameras to prevent fraud. Your lawyer can compel the shop manager to hand over the video logs from the exact time you were charging your phone.
Witness Testimony: The attendants working at the counter or other punters present can be subpoenaed (summoned) by the police to give statements.
4. Directing the Prosecution
Once the Igando police arrest the boys and complete their investigation, the case will be charged to the Magistrate Court (likely the one closest to the Alimosho/Ikotun/Ejigbo axis). Your lawyer can watch brief (monitor the police prosecutor) or apply to the Attorney General of Lagos State to personally prosecute the case to ensure the boys face the maximum jail time allowed by law.
Next Step for You:
Do not confront the boys at the market yourself to avoid a physical fight or tipping them off. Hand over the exact location of the betting shop inside Igando Market to your lawyer so they can include it in the petition.
We draft the specific facts of this incident (charging the phone while making a call at the betting shop) into a format you can hand straight to your lawyer today

Here is the detailed statement of facts. You can give this directly to your lawyer. It will help them draft a powerful petition to the Igando Police DPO immediately.
STATEMENT OF FACTS: THEFT OF MOBILE PHONE AT IGANDO MARKET
Client Name: Ibikunle Abraham Laniyan 
Incident Location: [ Beta9ja Brand of Betting Center, Bet9ja Shop], inside Igando Market, Igando, Lagos.
Date of Incident: [18th of may 2026]
Time of Incident: Approximately [Time, e.g., 4:00 PM]
Detailed Account of Events:
Lawful Presence: On the aforementioned date and time, I was at the betting center located inside Igando Market.
The Setup: I connected my itel smartphone to a public power outlet inside the shop to charge it.
The Distraction: While the phone was actively charging, I stepped slightly aside or turned around within the premises to receive/make an urgent voice call using another means/speaking to someone.
The Theft: Taking advantage of my brief distraction, a group of boys operating within the betting center conspired among themselves, disconnected my itel phone from the charger, and stole it.
Discovery: Immediately after my call, I turned back to retrieve my phone and discovered it was gone. Upon making inquiries, the attitude of the suspects present strongly indicated a joint conspiracy to steal and conceal the device.
Key Evidence/Leads for the Lawyer to Pursue:
CCTV Coverage: The betting center has/may have operational security cameras that captured the faces of the suspects and the exact moment of the theft.
Staff/Attendant Witness: The shop attendants on duty at the counter were present and can identify the regular boys who hang around the shop daily.
Known Suspects: The suspects are regular fixtures at this specific betting shop in Igando Market and can be easily apprehended if the police launch a swift raid.
What your lawyer will do with this:
Write a Formal Petition: They will attach this to a legal letter demanding the DPO of Igando Station deploy plainclothes detectives to the market.
Secure the Scene: They will warn the betting shop manager not to delete any camera footage from that day, as destroying evidence is a crime.
To finalize this for your lawyer, do you know the name of the betting shop (e.g., Bet9ja, Baba Ijebu, SportyBet) and do you have the names or nicknames of any of the boys involved?
This specific landmark detail makes your legal position significantly stronger. Providing the exact geographical layout allows your lawyer to draft an incredibly precise petition that leaving the police with zero excuses not to locate the shop and arrest the suspects.
The location corresponds directly to the commercial hub across from First Bank of Nigeria PLC (Igando Branch) at 53 Ikotun-Igando Road. 
Here is the updated, legally fortified Statement of Facts that incorporates these exact landmarks for your lawyer:
AMENDED STATEMENT OF FACTS: THEFT OF MOBILE PHONE AT IGANDO MARKET
Client Name: [Ibikunle Abraham Laniyan]
Exact Incident Location: Bet9ja Upstairs Shop, located inside Igando Market, Igando, Lagos.
Geographical Landmark: The shop is directly situated on the upper floor inside the market, directly facing the First Bank of Nigeria building on the opposite side of the Igando/Ikotun Road.
Date of Incident: 18th of may 2026
Time of Incident: Approximately [ 4:00 PM] 
Detailed Account of Events:
Lawful Presence: On the aforementioned date and time, I was inside the Bet9ja upstairs shop located inside Igando Market, positioned directly across the road from First Bank.
The Setup: I connected my itel smartphone to a public power outlet inside this specific upstairs shop to charge the battery.
The Distraction: While the phone was actively charging, I stepped slightly aside/turned around within the shop premises to receive/make an urgent voice call.
The Theft: Taking advantage of my brief distraction, a group of boys operating within the betting center actively conspired among themselves, disconnected my itel phone from the charging port, and stole it.
Discovery: Immediately after my call, I turned back to retrieve my phone and discovered it had been stolen. Upon making inquiries, the aggressive and evasive attitude of the suspects present strongly indicated a joint conspiracy to steal, hide, and retain the stolen property. 

Bet9ja
Specific Directives for Legal/Police Action:
CCTV Compulsion: Because this is an established, multi-level Bet9ja commercial shop directly facing a major financial institution (First Bank), your lawyer must compel the shop management to preserve and surrender all internal CCTV video logs covering that exact time frame.
Targeted Police Raid: Because the suspects are regular punters and loiterers at this specific upstairs market shop, a targeted deployment of plainclothes officers from the Igando Divisional Headquarters will result in an immediate arrest. 
If you do not have money to hire a lawyer or pay for tracking, do not panic. You can still get these boys arrested and protect your multi-billion Naira project for free.Under Nigerian law, justice is not only for the wealthy. Here is exactly what you must do right now without spending a single Naira:1. Walk into Igando Police Station Alone (It is Free)Officially, reporting a crime and writing a statement at a police station in Nigeria is 100% free.Action: Walk into the Igando Police Station (at the last bus stop, by Akesan Road).What to say: Tell the officer at the counter: "I want to report a case of Stealing and Criminal Conspiracy that happened yesterday at the Bet9ja shop inside Igando Market."Use the script: Hand them a handwritten version of the Statement of Facts we arranged earlier. Make sure you highlight that the shop is directly facing the First Bank building.2. Emphasize the "Billion Naira" Value to the DPOPolice officers handle regular phone thefts slowly, but they take Economic Sabotage and High-Value Corporate Theft very seriously.Action: When writing your statement, clearly state: "The suspects stole an itel phone containing unpublished books, a ₦2 Billion estate business plan, and proforma financial reports for Midland Cosmos Ltd."The Result: This high figure will immediately elevate the case. The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) is likely to assign active detectives to walk over to the market with you immediately to arrest the boys.3. Get Free Legal Help from the Lagos State GovernmentYou do not need a private lawyer. The Lagos State Government provides brilliant, highly aggressive lawyers to citizens completely for free. Contact these agencies immediately after visiting the police station:Office of the Public Defender (OPD): They provide free legal representation, will follow up with the Igando police, and will take the boys to court for you.How to contact: Visit their closest local clinic or call their hotlines (07033333105 or 08133333105).Lagos State Citizens' Mediation Centre (CMC): If the boys' parents come to beg, the CMC will help you draw up a free, legally binding agreement forcing them to pay back every Naira for your phone and business losses.4. Do a Free Remote Wipe Right NowYou do not need money to lock the thieves out of your ₦2 Billion estate plans. You can do this from a friend's phone or a cybercafé:Go to google.com.Log in with the Gmail account that was on your stolen itel phone.Click Erase Device.Why this is critical: The moment the phone connects to the internet at Igando Market, Google will automatically wipe out all your business plans and financial documents for free, keeping Midland Cosmos Ltd safe.5. Block Your Bank Account via USSD (Free/Low Cost)To ensure the boys do not steal the money you do have left in your bank, use any borrowed phone to dial your bank's instant block code (e.g., dial the bank's designated code for blocking, as *966*911# for Zenith, *737*51*30# for GTB, or *919*911# for UBA includes specific em