-
Sri Lanka cyclone caused $4.1 bn damage: World Bank
-
Billionaire Ellison offers personal guarantee for son's bid for Warner Bros
-
Tech stocks lead Wall Street higher, gold hits fresh record
-
Telefonica to shed around 5,500 jobs in Spain
-
Cambodia says Thailand launches air strikes after ASEAN meet on border clashes
-
McCullum wants to stay as England coach despite Ashes drubbing
-
EU slams China dairy duties as 'unjustified'
-
Italy fines Apple nearly 100 mn euros over app privacy feature
-
America's Cup switches to two-year cycle
-
Jesus could start for Arsenal in League Cup, says Arteta
-
EU to probe Czech aid for two nuclear units
-
Strauss says sacking Stokes and McCullum will not solve England's Ashes woes
-
Clashing Cambodia, Thailand agree to border talks after ASEAN meet
-
Noel takes narrow lead after Alta Badia slalom first run
-
Stocks diverge as rate hopes rise, AI fears ease
-
Man City players face Christmas weigh-in as Guardiola issues 'fatty' warning
-
German Christmas markets hit by flood of fake news
-
Liverpool fear Isak has broken leg: reports
-
West Indies captain says he 'let the team down' in New Zealand Tests
-
Thailand says Cambodia agrees to border talks after ASEAN meet
-
Alleged Bondi shooters conducted 'tactical' training in countryside, Australian police say
-
Swiss court to hear landmark climate case against cement giant
-
Steelers beat Lions in 'chaos' as three NFL teams book playoffs
-
Knicks' Brunson scores 47, Bulls edge Hawks epic
-
Global nuclear arms control under pressure in 2026
-
Five-wicket Duffy prompts West Indies collapse as NZ win series 2-0
-
Asian markets rally with Wall St as rate hopes rise, AI fears ease
-
Jailed Malaysian ex-PM Najib loses bid for house arrest
-
Banned film exposes Hong Kong's censorship trend, director says
-
Duffy, Patel force West Indies collapse as NZ close in on Test series win
-
Australian state pushes tough gun laws, 'terror symbols' ban after shooting
-
A night out on the town during Nigeria's 'Detty December'
-
US in 'pursuit' of third oil tanker in Caribbean: official
-
CO2 soon to be buried under North Sea oil platform
-
Steelers edge Lions as Bears, 49ers reach playoffs
-
India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits
-
McCullum admits errors in Ashes preparations as England look to salvage pride
-
Pets, pedis and peppermints: When the diva is a donkey
-
'A den of bandits': Rwanda closes thousands of evangelical churches
-
Southeast Asia bloc meets to press Thailand, Cambodia on truce
-
As US battles China on AI, some companies choose Chinese
-
AI resurrections of dead celebrities amuse and rankle
-
Parallel Society Reveals Lineup for 2026 Lisbon Edition - A Cross-Genre Mashup of Cultural and Tech Pioneers
-
Ai4 2026 Announces Dynamic Keynote Panel Featuring Geoffrey Hinton, Fei‑Fei Li & Andrew Ng
-
NESR Becomes First Oilfield Services Company to Commission Original Artwork Created from Recycled Produced Water
-
SMX Strikes Joint Initiative with FinGo & Bougainville Refinery Ltd to Deliver Verifiable Identification for Trillion Dollar Gold Market
-
Blue Gold and Trust Stamp Execute Strategic LOI to Develop Biometric, Passwordless Wallet Infrastructure for Gold-Backed Digital Assets
-
SK tes Announces Grand Opening of New Shannon Facility, Marking a Milestone for Sustainable Technology in Ireland
-
FDA Officially Confirms Kava is a Food Under Federal Law
-
Greenliant NVMe NANDrive(TM) SSDs Selected for Major Industrial, Aerospace and Mission Critical Programs
Hustling in Lagos to 'survive in hell'
It's midnight. Luxury cars arrive outside Cocoon, a nightclub in Lagos, Nigeria's largest and most vibrant city. In minutes, dozens of people surround the vehicles, hoping to make a buck.
In the wealthy Ikoyi neighbourhood, the flow of people chasing money never stops. All survive on informal jobs they find daily on the streets.
For a handful of dollars, they help people park in front of expensive restaurants, bars and clubs, and help manage traffic during the day.
In the megacity of some 20 million people, for the poorest a good day is when you have enough to eat. A bad day is when you don't -- and those days are increasingly frequent as high fuel and food costs bite into earnings.
"In Nigeria, it's simple. Either you hustle or you die. So even 100 naira (25 cents), we take it," says Musa Omar, standing opposite the Cocoon nightclub.
Africa's most populous country has some 80 million people living below the national poverty line, earning less than 1.90 dollars a day.
And in rural Nigeria, millions live in areas where insecurity is rife, making living conditions even harsher.
Many are now being pushed to a tipping point, after cost of living and food prices increased following the coronavirus pandemic and then again after Russia declared war in Ukraine.
Nigeria's official year-on-year inflation is now 18 percent, with food inflation at 20 percent -- a five-year high.
In Lagos, hustlers -- people living and working by the day -- can be seen at every corner.
They embody one of the city's mottos often seen painted in colourful letters on trucks: "No food for lazy man."
The street is like a river, and they hope desperately to catch a passing fish.
"I'm willing to work anywhere, to do anything, to make a decent living," said Omar, 36.
"Before, it was not like this... prices have gone up, everything is expensive and everybody is suffering."
- God, only 'hope' -
Every day, thousands of people, mostly young, trickle into the cities and in particular Lagos, hoping to capture a small fraction of the immense wealth concentrated in the hands of a select few.
It's the case of Kasheem Sadiq who left Kaduna, in the north, after the death of his baby son, Yusuf, who "got sick".
"I had to find 9,000 naira (about $20) to pay the treatment but I couldn’t because price of food is up. And there is no job anywhere," said the 44-year-old, standing under the only functioning light of a dark street of Lagos.
Now working in Lagos, he says he earns about 2,500 naira ($6) a day -- almost three times more than what half of the population earns -- but, "every night, I’m crying, away from my family," he said.
It's now 2.20 am outside the Cocoon nightclub. Someone in a Porsche is trying to park while a group of hustlers guide the driver so that he doesn't crash the luxury car in a ditch full of trash.
"The rich are getting so rich and nobody cares about the poor," says Abdul Musa, 35, who seems to be the hustlers' informal chief. "Only God can help us."
- Drugs, prostitution -
From Benue, in the east, Musa has been working the streets of Ikoyi for the past five years. He says he sleeps in a stable at night with donkeys.
"I don't want to have children," he says. In this country, "we are surviving in hell."
Five a.m. Clubbers are streaming out, heading back to their cars.
It's late, or early, but someone shouting the following three syllables is enough to arouse the crowd: "Bu-ha-ri", in reference to President Muhammadu Buhari.
The 79-year-old former army general is stepping down next year after his two terms in office allowed by the constitution.
For many including for those waiting outside Cocoon, the government is "corrupt" and "does nothing for the people".
Anita Obasi, the only woman in the group of hustlers, is looking at the stream of cars driving away, smoking a joint.
In Nigeria, drugs are widely consumed among the street hustlers as a way to escape reality.
Wearing a black cap, the 24-year-old smiles. She says smoking "eases the pain away".
For the past two years, she has been working as a prostitute, charging the equivalent of $9 a client or $11 when she travels to them.
After two decades of growth, Nigeria entered a recession in 2016, after a fall in oil prices. The economy was just starting to recover in 2020 when the pandemic hit. And the war in Ukraine has made everything much worse.
Obasi lives in constant anguish: will she be able to feed her daughter at the end of the day?
"I try thinking about the bright side of things, but everything around me is going down."
W.Stewart--AT