You're doing the Lord's work brother. Your videos should be making more viewership numbers but know it that Ndi-Igbo and Ala-Igbo appreciates this your videos. And I believe, with Akuruo-Ulo campaign, people are going to be making use of your videos a lot, even engaging with you. Daalu
lt a shame how the ignorance in nigeria is destroying these beautiful and protecting forest,trees for houses.By the time they start struggling with erosion,landslide they will start crying then,abandoning the homes.Protect the trees,the vegetations,it is there to protect us.
Where in this video there is no tree? Show me one single town in the whole world you can find the amount of trees in this video in the center of the town? Mention one town, I am waiting. Just simply say you aren't happy seeing a place that is thriving and still preserve nature. You are only showing your unhappiness in a cunning way, otherwise how can somebody says that they are cutting threes in this town!
@@nenitafrica6851 Long at the beauty of the places without houses yet,you will see the difference.Nigerian form of development has to be looked into now before they start demolition people houses in the future.They should move people closer in cluster areas and build upward instead of these duplexes and mansions..
@suntanglory please this is people's home town , where do you expect them to leave ? under the trees? This is people's village and not forest plantation, the villagers still have forest round the village, zukwanu Ike 😂 enough already
@suntanglory This shows you don't know anything about the Igbos. These places you see are ancestral lands. It was passed down from generations. All the houses you see in this video are built on ancestral land. The government has nothing to do in those places. Those people are indigenous and their progenitors have lived there for thousands of years, everybody in that Place knows each other. They don't use address, their ancestral names are their address. It is obvious, that you aren't a Nigerian, otherwise, you wouldn't be asking this kind of question. Igbo don't build houses together with others. If you see 2 or 3 houses staying together, then those houses are owned by brothers.