Tag: 2face

  • [Video]:”I am a coward that spoke up”- 2face

    [Video]:”I am a coward that spoke up”- 2face

    Innocent Idibia a.k.a 2face took to his Instagram page yesterday to appreciate Nigerians who went all out to protest on Monday. The acclaimed hit maker in an emotion laden voice said he watched in tears as Nigerians came out to speak up in protest both off line and online.

    For those who have been criticizing 2face online for pulling out from the much publicized protest, 2face has a word for them:” I am a coward that spoke up and I will always continue to speak up. I grateful to everyone that lent their voice when I lost mine. You guys are the real heroes.”

    Watch the video below

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BQQG78ajgv-/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

  • Amidst social media bashing, Gordons apologizes to 2face

    Amidst social media bashing, Gordons apologizes to 2face

    …Days after calling him an illiterate

    Popular comedian, Gordons has apologized to pop star 2face, days after calling him an illiterate in a viral interview. The outspoken comedian said 2face made a mistake trying to use a tool he isn’t familiar with to protest.

    In an interview with Goldmyne Tv, he said:”How are you going to express yourself TuFace when microphone is right in your face and you are asked to express your grievance and the reason why you are protesting? You can’t express yourself, it’s not your game. Do it with music you are used to. TuFace is the only illiterate who can sing correctly”.

    Fans of 2face Idibia took to their social media pages to criticize Gordons’ statement.

    After so much criticisms and bashing, Gordons apologizes to 2face saying:” Sometimes people misunderstand the reason we do what we do”.

    Watch the video clip below

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BQP_3fkASB3/?taken-by=thenewsguru_ent

  • You don’t need a celebrity to protest for you- RMD

    You don’t need a celebrity to protest for you- RMD

    Veteran actor, Richard Mofe Damijo has stated that Nigerians don’t need a celebrity to protest for them.He made this statement against the backdrop of 2face cancelling the protest he was meant to spearhead. The revered entertainer said he would have been part of the protest , if he was in the country.

    In his words: “AY told me #10daysinsuncity but kept me there for, errrrr… come @aycomedian how many days una keep me there sef? On a more serious note, I respect the two men in this picture with me. @aycomedian for consistently making smart choices in the comedy movie business and @official2baba for being not just a talented artist but more importantly a humble and fine gentleman and let me dare say that #IStandWithNigeria and #IStandWithTubaba because you do not need a celebrity to give you voice or make you take a stand against issues that directly affect you.

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BQLf1Sml3k7/?taken-by=mofedamijo

     

    “I’m not in Nigeria and if I were I probably would have been a part of the protest, not as a celebrity but as a Nigerian who is experiencing the same issues as every other Nigerian but hey, thankfully, I don’t need to be in the streets to register my protest, so again, MY NAME IS RICHARD MOFE-DAMIJO AND I STAND WITH NIGERIA.”

     

     

     

  • “Let no one blame 2face”- Reuben Abati declares

    “Let no one blame 2face”- Reuben Abati declares

    Reuben Abati, former media aide to the ex-president Goodluck Jonathan, has expressed his views on 2face pulling out from a protest he spearheaded from the onset.

    In his article titled:The 2 faces of 2face, he said:“Let no one blame Tuface. His stage name Tuface is the name of Janus: the two-face Greek god, who looks in two directions. When it mattered most in his career, Tuface Idibia answered the call of his name!”

    Read the article below

    Tuface’s decision to lead a protest to register the dissatisfaction of Nigerians with the performance of the incumbent administration and to reiterate the value of government’s responsibility to the people was his finest moment as a citizen and artiste. But it is also now, with his Jammeh-like volte-face, his worst moment. His transformation into a champion of democratic values and voice of the masses brought him added stardom and value. His retreat has turned him into a revolutionary manqué. He deserves our understanding and sympathy.

    When on 24th January Tuface (Innocent Dibia) announced that he was going to lead, under the umbrella of the Tuface Foundation, a mass protest against the economic policies of the Buhari government, he immediately attracted public interest. A multiple award-winning musician, a naturally talented stage performer and author of at least two evergreen songs: “My African Queen” and “If Love is a Crime”, TuBaba, as he is also known, sounded like he was moving from art to politics, and seemed ready to answer to the true calling of the artist as the conscience of the people.

    Artists and creative persons have always led protests and lent their voices to progressive causes. That much is the case in the United States at the moment, where artistes have raised their voices and joined protests to remind the “insurgent in the White House” that America is a land of freedom, democracy and justice and not bigotry and tyranny. Here at home, Fela, and his cousin, the Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and others as well, have shown the power of creativity and stardom as a veritable vehicle for social change and justice. Artists and their art, and their movement from stage, or the printed page, to the public arena of action have always saved humanity, by humanizing man. This has been the case from Sophocles, all through time and history to Olanrewaju Adepoju, Beyonce and Kanye West.

    But activism comes with a price. Tuface obviously didn’t bargain for that. He received enormous support. His announcement of the February 5, later February 6 protest energized the angry, frustrated Nigerian base, and drew our unrelenting “children of anger” back into an overdrive on social media. The international community also became interested, waiting to see the effect of a protest driven by star-power in Nigeria. It was coincidentally a season of protests across the world: in the Gambia, there had been protests against Yahyah Jammeh with a positive outcome, in the US, the UK and elsewhere, Donald Trump’s travel ban on seven Muslim-majority countries and his misogyny led to protests on both counts, and in the case of the former, a Federal judge has given a ruling that has resulted in the suspension of the ban. In Cameroon, concerned citizens are protesting over discrimination against English-speaking Cameroonians. In Romania, a sea of protesting citizens has just had its way. There is all around the world, right now, a resurgence and affirmation of people power, be it Brexit or left-wing activism in Europe. Individuals and groups lead such moments in history- what makes them different is the fire in their bellies and their readiness to command the revolution, at great personal risk.

    It looked initially as if Tuface had that burning fire in his belly, but he couldn’t make that leap between self-preservation and the risks of rebellion. He had appeared on television. He spoke confidently about the need for real change in Nigeria. He encouraged Nigerians to come out en masse to support the movement. He even announced the colour and dress code of the protest. His wife stood by him and she, too, talked about her husband’s convictions about national progress and good governance. Each time Tuface appeared in the media, during those five minutes in the sun, he looked bright and determined. But everything changed late Saturday evening. The recorded video of Tuface’s volte-face, announcing the cancellation of the Feb. 6 protest showed him looking dispirited, broken, ashen, as if he had been shaken up and chastised. He looked unsettled with his scraggy, uncombed beard. It is not difficult to know when a man’s balls have been squeezed.

    Tuface actually deserves our sympathy. He must have gone through a lot of pressures that broke his spirit. His capitulation makes us appreciate even better the heroism of those who always stood up to dictatorships. His example is indeed a great lesson…And I mean that positively for the fact that…Despite the massive support that he received, he also received a lot of discouragement. An old ally of his, some guy appropriately called Blackface was one of the first persons to blacken the idea of the protest. Some Nollywood, belle-forever-face-front-chop-money-money-finish-carry-go characters also opposed Tuface. Some musicians too, although in the long run, Tuface was able to mobilise the support of every section of the Nigerian community at home and in diaspora. By Saturday when he poured cold ice on the whole thing, the protest had even grown beyond him, much larger, with others seizing the initiative and turning what he had thought would be a small show into a nationwide and diaspora event. At that point, Tuface was no longer the singer of sultry songs, but the symbol of a rebellion. The enormity of that potential must have frightened him. He didn’t have the courage to see it through. Leadership is about courage. A coward can never lead a rebellion.

    But we should struggle to understand his situation. He was accused of having seven children from three women, which is an absolutely stupid point. An artist does not have to be a saint. We relate to their art and their engagements with society on the basis of the positive value that they bring forth. It is also possible that Tuface received pressures from his multiple in-laws, and even the Baby Mamas defending their stakes in his life. The official wife must have been accused of trying to encourage him to get into trouble so he could get killed and she alone can sit on his estate. The Baby Mamas and all the in-laws must have called to remind him that his children are still very young and he needs to be alive to be their father and so he should think twice before going to use his chest to stop Nigeria Police bullets. Family members, to whom he is obviously a breadwinner, must have advised him to stay with his singing and dancing and not get involved in politics. They would remind him how Fela’s mum got killed and how Fela’s house was razed down, and how every artist who dared the Nigerian government ended up in exile or in prison or with a strange motor accident.

    The Nigerian government was of course unhappy with the planned protest, and the idea of it created enormous confusion in Abuja and Aso Rock. While the office of the Acting President spoke about the right to protest and the government not having anything against the expression of fundamental human rights, the Office of the President on vacation made it very clear that the would-be protesters are enemies of the government of the day and sore losers. Those two seemingly contradictory impressions from Aso Rock can only point to one thing: high-level intrigue within. That is probably why the Nigeria Police kept shuffling: we don’t approve of the protest, we do, we don’t, we beg. The timing says it all also. With the President out of the country, and the plan of the protesters to welcome him with a Trump-like protest from Abuja, to Lagos, Port Harcourt, Uyo and Akure, and in parts of the Western world, the damage would have been incalculable. And Tuface would have been held responsible for leading the sabotage. No Nigerian government since 1999 has benefitted from any mass protest. The anti-third term protest hobbled the Obasanjo government. The Jonathan government never recovered from the pro-fuel subsidy protests of January 2012. Tuface and his planned protest had set the stage for a similar prospect for the Buhari government.
    What Tuface imagined was a clean-hearted civil action would have resulted in absolute panic, with some informal voices in and around government doing dangerous analysis on ethnic and religious grounds. Reckless hypotheses such as the following: (a) “so, as Baba hand over this thing to Osinbajo so, the only thing his Christian brothers think they should do is to organize a protest in Baba’s absence?” (b) “You don hear say Osinbajo’s office say people have right to protest? So, Baba cannot even travel on vacation again. Walahi, these Yoruba people cannot be trusted.” (c) What are these security people doing? If they are loyal to Baba, by now they should have invited that Tuface, and ask him about the two SUVs that Akpabio gave him and his wife when they got married. They should show him strong evidence that the SUVs were bought with Akwa Ibom state government money and he should pay back the money or get ready to be sued for being an accomplice in a case of diversion of public funds. (d) Or you could have some people affirming the narrative that was put out by the APC and friends of the government of the day viz: “this is the PDP at work. Tuface must be an agent of PDP. Why are our own APC people sleeping? Baba no dey around, they want to pull down the country. So, Tuface is now working with Ayo Fayose of Ekiti, to embarrass Baba? This Osinbajo, can we trust him?”

    By pulling the trigger at this time, Tuface simply put a lot of people under pressure and placed their jobs and loyalty at risk -no doubt about it, they must have come after him with a sledgehammer to stop and discourage him. Clear evidence: a counter-revolutionary #IstandwithBuhari protest has already been announced to last for two days. The Tuface revolution that has been abandoned by its main motivator teaches us more lessons about the dynamics of power in Nigeria and the temperament of the resident power elite. Will the protest now take place on February 6, without Tuface? Or will everyone hold fire and down their tools of anger? What is certain, however, is that Tuface is likely to sit at home tomorrow with Anne, his temptingly pretty wife by his side, watching the latest episode of Big Brother Naija on TV, with chicken and salad before him, and a bottle of wine, and one of his hands, innocently setting the stage for the amorous prelude for child number eight. With his wife telling him: “don’t worry yourself dear, Nigeria is not worth dying for. Who wan die make e go die. You have tried your best, my darling husband!”.
    That is how many would-be heroes become anti-heroes, and their dreams die a-borning. If the protests go ahead on February 6 as many are threatening, nonetheless, Tuface would lose a lot. If it doesn’t go ahead, he would still lose.

    The torch of protest that he has lit may not burn on the streets of Nigeria; it is burning already in the minds of the people. He may have chickened out, but he has already achieved the goal of his initial plan. He has by lending his star power to an anti-Buhari protest, expanded the population of angry Nigerians. He has given voice to their anger and fears. His withdrawal from action will not excuse him. Whatever anyone tells him, in the long run, he would still be punished for his bravery and cowardice on both counts. He should not be surprised if for the next few months, he doesn’t get invited to any concert, or performance contract, or if he gets to perform anywhere, he could be booed off the stage. He should not be surprised if his phones stop ringing, or if it rings at all, he could be told: “call me on what’s app I beg, I don’t know if they are monitoring your calls.”
    Let no one blame Tuface. His stage name Tuface is the name of Janus: the two-face Greek god, who looks in two directions. When it mattered most in his career, Tuface Idibia answered the call of his name!

  • 2face protest:”Government is afraid of what can become of Nigeria”- Basketmouth

    2face protest:”Government is afraid of what can become of Nigeria”- Basketmouth

    Nigerian comedian Basketmouth ,has applauded pop star 2face Idibia, for speaking up in the face of despair. He stated that whether 2face pulls out from the protest or not, he stepped out , unlike the people cursing him on social media.

    The ace comedian made this known in a statement made on his Instagram page. Hear him:” Before Tuface stepped out to air his views and speak for most Nigerians if not all, most people got so comfortable complaining about the state of Nigeria on blogs, their homes etc. Nobody made a move to do anything about anything. Whether he pulled it off or not….bottom line is that he took a step, unlike the people cursing him out even after he gave a very sensible reason to pull out. At least now we know that the Govt is afraid of what can become of Nigeria if everyone comes together to speak in one voice, one heart to achieve one goal.”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BQITQ4lhdqf/?taken-by=basketmouth

  • Nigerians angry over cancellation of 2face’s anti- government protest

    Nigerians angry over cancellation of 2face’s anti- government protest

    Following the cancellation of 2face Idibia’s planned protest, Nigerians have been expressing their views over the cancellation of the planned anti-government march.2face who has been spearheading the much publicized protest, shocked many Nigerians when he announced on Saturday night that it has been cancelled.

    Thereafter, Nigerians have been expressing their displeasure over the cancellation. Ever since 2face posted the video on Instagram, it has had over 195,000 views and 8,740 comments

    Nwanyi Ukpor who isn’t pleased with the cancellation wrote:”Shame on 2face!”.

    A certain makeup artiste with the moniker Cect Signature added that:”2face from his looks has cried, he was pressurized to make that statement. Infact that statement was written by DSS. My broda no mind them, abeg make them no kee u like them kee fela. Nigeria go survive.

    Another commenter, Fali said the video was made under duress:”This video was made clearly under duress.. wat happened to your glasses 2baba.??.. dis is very much unlike you.. without ur glasses… he is being threatened”

    Officialtflow said:” Thunder Fire all of una wey don abuse this broda with all manners of words. sorry sorry nigeria my country”.

    Juliet Unanma on her part said:” I wish people will just stop talking or commenting anyhow. I have read so many comments here and there are so many selfish comments here. What if 2baba dies or gets hurt in the process of protesting, what then happens? Some people will obviously say he’s foolish to protest yet they’re the ones pushing him to go ahead. If someone wants to protest, take the lead na and others who are ready to die will follow u. So many unfair comments here about him loosing his self confidence and abt gain. Be real people please. He’s listened to his mama and doing the right thing for him and his family.”

    Justina on her part, chose to blame the cancellation on the oppressors themselves, adding that our leaders are scared of being confronted with the truth.

    “I can see da pains in your eyes @official2baba. We know the hijackers of the protest. It is the oppressors themselves. The clueless and wicked leaders we have in power. They are just scared of being confronted with the truth. They are blood suckers and merchants of death, hunger n poverty. But, #fellownigerians God pass them. They might have succeeded in intimidating @tubaba to back out, but our voices, tears and cries have been heard. If not by them, then by God. God bless you a million times over.”

    Faboade Dapo admonished 2face to focus on his music, stating that he knew this was going to happen

    “Can’t just stop laughing, I knew this would actually happened. Mr 2baba if you will use my honorable advice sir, you better face your music career don’t let any Damm destroy it for you.” #maximumrespect

    Amazingly, Enough is Enough an advocacy group ,and other celebrities like Seyi Law have vowed to go on with the protest.

  • 2face Idibia, Sir Shina Peters and others for Eargasm Concert

    2face Idibia, Sir Shina Peters and others for Eargasm Concert

    It is rare for you to find acclaimed music stars perform under one roof with a live band. This experience will be created at the forthcoming Eargasm concert slated for Saturday, February 11, 2017 at Eko Convention Centre, Victoria Island Lagos.

    2face Idibia, Sir Shina Peters, Tekno, Timi Dakolo, Yinka Davies, Kelly Handsome and others will make up the stellar cast of performers for this premium concert experience. The event will be compered by comic act Bovi, while DJ Neptune will be on the wheels of steel.

    During a media parley held at Eko Hotel and Suites, the soulful entertainer 2face Idibia stated that ‘Eargasm’ concert is going to be like no other. He further assures lovers of good music of an indelible entertaining experience.

    “Every other event that will take place that period will be like normal events, no extra activity. This is going to be classy and like the name suggests, Eargasm is going to be ‘ear-blowing’. The kind of music that you will listen to on that day is not going to be your everyday kind of music” he said.

    One of the goals of Eargasm is to present music lovers with an unforgettable blend of timeless music drawn from various genres of music. The artistes are gearing up to mesmerize the guests with their diverse hit songs The concert is packaged by Eko Hotel and Suites in partnership with Buckwyld Media Network.

     

     

  • “The protest is not about 2face, its about us- Seyi law fires back

    “The protest is not about 2face, its about us- Seyi law fires back

    Nigerian comedian cum actor, Seyi Law has vowed to be part of the protest slated for tomorrow. He said, despite the fact that 2face has cancelled the protest, the demonstration will still be held without him.

    In a series of tweets, the outspoken comedian writes:”I am giving Nigerians the assurance that I will be at the stadium tomorrow. We have a right to our protest. I absolutely understand 2baba, but I am not backing out”

  • [Video]: 2face insists planned protest will hold

    [Video]: 2face insists planned protest will hold

    Despite pressures from the Nigerian Police force on 2face to postpone the anticipated planned protest,the soulful singer has said that the protest will hold on Monday 6th of February against all odds.

    He took to his Instagram page to make the announcement via a video.In his words:”This is a pro-NIGERIA march. Pls guys lets do this peacefully and orderly. One love #istandwithnigeria”

    Watch the video below

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BQFRY-uDyRe/?taken-by=official2baba

  • Police hasn’t banned 2face’s nationwide protest

    Police hasn’t banned 2face’s nationwide protest

    Efe Omoregbe CEO Now Musik and talent manager to 2face stated that the police hasn’t banned 2face’s planned protest. Speaking in a recent interview, he said that the police is yet to inform them that the protest has been banned.

    According to him:”We have reached out to them. We are having conversations with them. I am not sure the news making the rounds about the protest is true. The feedback from the police authorities is quite different from that. I am not sure about the source of the police story and how true it is. The police has not told us they are banning the protest. We are in talks with them. They have not communicated that to us either in words, written form or body language. Maybe you should reach out to the police authorities to clarify their stance but on behalf of the 2face foundation, we do not think that is true because that is not the feedback we have received. We do not think the police will be telling us one thing and will be telling the media something else .”

    When asked if they have sought protest permit from the police, he said they have been in constant communication with them.

    “We are actively engaging the police. Our protest is a controlled conversation. Our objectives are clear. 2baba is a peace ambassador. The 2face foundation’s primary focus is peace building and advocating for good governance. The protest is a citizens engagement. It is not an organized labor conversation. It is not pro or against anybody or religion. It is unrepresented” he added.

    Speaking on Channels TV today,Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni said the constitution permits protest but also lays down the requirements for a protest.

    In his words:” As at yesterday, they didn’t announce that it has been postponed. The constitution makes provision for a protest,but it also lays down some regulations. We just want to make sure there is no break down of law and order. “