Yaoundé Cameroon vs Abuja Nigeria

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 13. 06. 2024
  • During my stay in Cameroon, I couldn't resist the allure of Yaoundé. This ancient city, adorned with lush hills and verdant landscapes, instantly reminded me of Kigali. The upper district of Bastos, a hub of vibrant nightlife, upscale hotels, and opulent residences, including those of numerous diplomats, stands out as the crown jewel of Yaoundé.
    French reigns as the official language in Cameroon, but the neighbourhood of Obili is a testament to the country's linguistic diversity, hosting the largest anglophone population. English and Cameroonian pidgin (creole) are widely spoken and understood. A fascinating linguistic development in Cameroon is the emergence of a hybrid language, blending French, English, and local dialects. The culinary scene in Cameroon is a true reflection of its cultural diversity, offering a vast and varied cuisine that I believe is unparalleled in Africa.
    Conversely, Abuja is a mixture of solid planning and a typical sub-Saharan African city. The people are equally diverse, with English as the official language. However, most people speak Nigerian pidgin English (creole) or a variant of English. Abuja's central area is dotted with trees, wide roads, and carefully planned boulevards and avenues. It is in the savannah and hinterlands, with a balance of rainfall and sunshine. As with the rest of West Africa, there is no winter. Instead, there are two seasons: rain (wet) and dry.
    Abuja has a metro system, which the government is trying to sell to the people. Nigerians are unfamiliar with the concept of a public transportation system. Despite the vastness of the city, it lacks both public transportation and a standardised emergency system. The city is the fastest-growing in Nigeria, doubling in population within the last decade.
    Let us know what you think in the comment section.

Komentáře • 276

  • @alajimanu5057
    @alajimanu5057 Před 20 dny +18

    Point of correction. I am a Cameroonian based in Nigeria. Yaounde can only be compared with cities like Calabar, enugu, kaduna etc not Abuja

    • @blazinghot99
      @blazinghot99 Před 15 dny +2

      No. I have visited Yaounde and toured throughout Nigeria. Yaounde cannot be compared even to Calabar, Enugu and Kaduna. You can compare it to Borno State in Nigeria. 🤔😑✌️

  • @user-ce6mk8tr1p
    @user-ce6mk8tr1p Před 24 dny +59

    You should be comparing yaounde and Enugu not Abuja

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +3

      @user-ce6mk8tr1p
      Yaoundé can be compared to Abuja. There are many areas where Yaoundé come ahead of Abuja.
      Thanks for stopping by.

    • @aframaco9491
      @aframaco9491 Před 24 dny +5

      The comparisons were about two national capitals!
      Enugu is a regional capital!!
      I imagine you mean Enugu, let alone Abuja, is good enough to compete with Yaounde, but that wasn't the vloggers intention!!
      👊🏾🇳🇬👊🏾🇳🇬!

    • @OlierOnah
      @OlierOnah Před 23 dny +1

      ​@@Rhino6how?

    • @oladapotobi1029
      @oladapotobi1029 Před 22 dny

      ​@@BantuCityDiaries
      Where?

    • @kriskros1592
      @kriskros1592 Před 22 dny

      Don't mind these Generator Republicans. All they're good at is looking down on other African countries. Ils sont foutes​@BantuCityDiaries

  • @agadezthoughts
    @agadezthoughts Před 24 dny +21

    I like it. Not biased. Intelligent comparison. Come to think of it, Southern Nigeria and Cameroon are very connected. In 2005 I was there for three weeks, noticed Cameroon learn everything about Nigeria even in schools. Quite impressive.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +4

      @agadezthoughts
      So true. They are very connected. Most people in Cross River State have roots in southwest Cameroon. They even have mutually intelligible languages.

    • @realebonyqueen7485
      @realebonyqueen7485 Před 23 dny +6

      ​@BantuCityDiaries Likewise, most people in Cameroon especially the English speaking Cameroonians have roots in Cross River State/South Southern part of Nigeria too.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @realebonyqueen7485
      It is actually the other way round. If you care to watch, we shot a two episode documentary in Cross River which were published on our main channel. See the link below.
      Episode 1: czcams.com/video/NhhvnDo4O4Y/video.html
      Episode 2: czcams.com/video/f4dDEv9z3mQ/video.html

    • @dermotwallace5533
      @dermotwallace5533 Před 23 dny +2

      Those Cameroonians were actually Nigerians in the 60s and before then. And that was why Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe's political party was named "The National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC)", which they all voted in Nigeria's elections. It was only due to referendum that they mistakenly chose to vote to belong to the Cameroonian divide and ceased to be Nigerian citizens since the 60s.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @dermotwallace5533
      I was referring to their indigeneity, not their European-demarcated borders. Yes, the 1960s plebiscite decoupled southern Cameroon from Nigeria, uniting them with the French Cameroon. I touched on this in my video comparing Douala vs Lagos (you can watch if you'd like).
      czcams.com/video/iEDI9Wwy248/video.html

  • @kfutuahnkain86
    @kfutuahnkain86 Před 16 dny +5

    I am a Cameroonian living in South Africa. You are correct my brother however i think that Yaounde housing and road infrastructure is shameful while Abuja is one of the well-planned cities in Africa

  • @dermotwallace5533
    @dermotwallace5533 Před 23 dny +12

    Abuja is NOT home to more Muslims, as the indigenous people of Abuja, the Gbagis are mostly Christians. Don't come from Cameroon to change our narrative please.

  • @godsanointed3397
    @godsanointed3397 Před 23 dny +9

    Point of correction: there are more Christians in Abuja than Muslims

    • @box498
      @box498 Před 6 dny +1

      Twice as much c over m

    • @godsanointed3397
      @godsanointed3397 Před 5 dny

      @@box498 thanks 🙏🏽,I know that too well.

  • @mrnaija101
    @mrnaija101 Před 24 dny +24

    Yes the metro has started running again, but you were wrong in saying Abuja has no intercity rail. Actually there's the Abuja-Kaduna State train service since over 7years

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +11

      @mrnaija101
      You are absolutely spot on. A single intercity rail between Abuja and Kaduna has been there long before the Abuja metro. You are 10000% right, and I was flat wrong.
      Thanks so much for correcting me. My sincere apology.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +7

      ​@@BantuCityDiariesalways make your research before doing your videos

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +2

      @tundebakare6887
      I did my research; you didn't. You claimed Abuja has more Christians, which is untrue. Missing Abuja's limited Abuja-Kaduna rail system doesn't constitute a lack of research. Your submissions, as evidenced by your numerous comments, demonstrated a limited understanding of Abuja. You should not be the one telling me to do research.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +7

      @@BantuCityDiaries your submission about Abuja having more Muslims than Christians is not true. There are more Christians in Abuja particularly in most North Central Nigeria than any northern region of Nigeria

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +5

      @@BantuCityDiaries the Karu satellite town which is the biggest in the Amac has more Christians than Muslims and also Gwagwalada area council and bwari has more Christians than Muslims. In the outskirts of Abuja like zuba and Suleja madalla I wil say there's a share of 50/50 population of both religion

  • @ani_ndokwa1244
    @ani_ndokwa1244 Před 24 dny +19

    😂😂u need to do ur findings & research before doing video.. 🇳🇬

    • @MarkNtiri
      @MarkNtiri Před 21 dnem

      Findings about what? This excellent piece people are still finding problems with it?

  • @Don_Jagadon
    @Don_Jagadon Před 24 dny +32

    I will choose Nigeria 1million times over cameroun

    • @ticharoy8530
      @ticharoy8530 Před 22 dny

      That’s why any Nigerian who comes to Cameroon doesn’t want to go back lol

    • @ashaade4176
      @ashaade4176 Před 19 dny

      Gaskiya, Nigeria or nothing!

  • @sunstar.
    @sunstar. Před 24 dny +19

    You know nothing about abuja young man

    • @ticharoy8530
      @ticharoy8530 Před 24 dny

      What doesn’t he know please!??

    • @sunstar.
      @sunstar. Před 24 dny +5

      @@ticharoy8530 current realities in infrastructural and human capital developments. Next time employ a tour guide for better insights. Thank you

    • @ticharoy8530
      @ticharoy8530 Před 24 dny +1

      @@sunstar. but he mentioned that in the video unless you didn’t watch

    • @sunstar.
      @sunstar. Před 24 dny +7

      @@ticharoy8530 I said current realities oo....let me give you an example, Abuja has Interstate rail system but he said that never existed, even the intra state railway system, he needed to do another voice over to correctly himself. That's why I said he needs a tour guide to update him on things about Abuja and Nigeria as a whole.

    • @alhajizubaidu
      @alhajizubaidu Před 24 dny

      Abuja is the fourth Largest city in Nigeria 🇳🇬 not third Lagos, Ibadan,Kanu,Abuja

  • @olanrewajudaodu7800
    @olanrewajudaodu7800 Před 25 dny +12

    Your comparison is not detailed enough about Abuja

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @olanrewajudaodu7800
      I totally agree. This was because we have covered Abuja several times in our other videos. In a 13-minute video, it will be hard to cover an entire city the size of Abuja or Yaoundé.

  • @esther2462
    @esther2462 Před 23 dny +5

    This video has only one intention: the intention is to drag NIGERIA!
    God have mercy on Nigeria 😢

  • @afolabifatusin7211
    @afolabifatusin7211 Před 24 dny +14

    You don't really know abuja

  • @ikennanwofor8877
    @ikennanwofor8877 Před 24 dny +13

    Abuja is not a Muslim state

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

      Exactly

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +1

      @ikennanwofor8877
      I never inferred that it was. However, there are more Muslims in Abuja than Christians. Abuja is not even a state.
      Thanks for stopping by!

    • @ukaegbueni2035
      @ukaegbueni2035 Před 22 dny +2

      ​@@BantuCityDiaries no dear we have more Christians than muslim in Abuja

    • @oladapotobi1029
      @oladapotobi1029 Před 22 dny

      He will not listen 😂

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 21 dnem

      @@oboraoyama6255 he will argue however we know the truth

  • @LekkyDev
    @LekkyDev Před 23 dny

    Thank you for your effort. Very insightful video.

  • @bamideleifenowo4179
    @bamideleifenowo4179 Před 23 dny +5

    Your Yaounde is miles away from Nigeria's old capital Lagos in terms of development not to talk about Abuja.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @bamideleifenowo4179
      Were you implying that Yaounde is ahead of both Lagos and Abuja?

  • @okezuo6067
    @okezuo6067 Před 20 dny +2

    Nice job 👍. Abuja has an intercity rail network from Abuja to kaduna and the intracity metro isnt just from the city center to the airport, you can also connect from the city center to idu then from idu to Kubwa suburb.

  • @Boy_flair
    @Boy_flair Před 21 dnem +6

    Bro why are you biased, u can't compare Abuja to Yaounde, abuja is way better

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @Femi_reezy
      Competition is looking for similarities. Any two more things can be compared. You can even compare Lagos and Cape Town, even though the former is no match for the latter by more than a hundred years behind.

    • @malvytheoo
      @malvytheoo Před 19 dny

      ​@@BantuCityDiariesa hundred years behind? Now I believe that you are really a biased and bitter soul 😂

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 19 dny

      @malvytheoo
      Probably about 200 years, if not more.

    • @malvytheoo
      @malvytheoo Před 19 dny +1

      @@BantuCityDiaries your opinion though, and guess what? It doesn't f**king matter 🤷

    • @kosh3298
      @kosh3298 Před 18 dny

      ​@@BantuCityDiariesSomeone said you are biased, you are still ignorantly displaying it in the comments section. You could not come up with proper informations about Abuja before making videos about it, and you are ignorantly talking about Cape Town being 200 years ahead than Lagos, that means Cape Town will be 1 million years ahead of Cameroon according to you.

  • @MyJuniorGreat
    @MyJuniorGreat Před 24 dny +10

    You guys have see finish I swear so you are comparing us with Ghana Cameron. When we are comparing with USA are you guys mad live Nigeria alone and face your business

    • @temiladealamudun5063
      @temiladealamudun5063 Před 23 dny +4

      Exactly 💯

    • @XY-rh3if
      @XY-rh3if Před 18 dny

      Nigeria compares with the US?😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅. Nearly all countries in Africa, if not all are run far better than Nigerians run Nigeria

    • @MyJuniorGreat
      @MyJuniorGreat Před 18 dny +3

      @@XY-rh3if your country is not even up to one state in Nigeria so you nor near .. make una pack well if not for our leaders you won't even be talking and there will be a time you will look for job in Nigeria that time is coming sooner and later

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 16 dny +1

      @MyJuniorGreat
      His country is Nigeria!

    • @MyJuniorGreat
      @MyJuniorGreat Před 16 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries let him speak for himself

  • @semiyusulaimon5841
    @semiyusulaimon5841 Před 24 dny +1

    Good job I like your honest

  • @MarkNtiri
    @MarkNtiri Před 21 dnem

    Mr youtuber are you Cameroonian? Are you a masters, doctorate student? This's well put together, well edited, excellent english etc etc. Do you have a piece comparing Ghana and other countries?

  • @papap1186
    @papap1186 Před 24 dny +7

    Yaounde is a typical village compare to Abuja.

    • @georgesk5285
      @georgesk5285 Před 21 dnem

      Weti you smoke? you well at all?. The fact that Abuja was newly built does not mean Yaounde is not an impressive city

    • @bryan1377
      @bryan1377 Před 21 dnem

      Abeg I’m a Nigerian but this is very disrespectful. Na this kind talk dey make them dem dey kpai Nigerians because this kind talk fit bring serious hate. Make una try dey respect others abeg

  • @ntokoernestntoko2885
    @ntokoernestntoko2885 Před 15 dny

    Yaounde is like darkness, while Abuja is light.

  • @tundebakare6887
    @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +5

    The Cameroon understand ñigerian pidgin so well

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +2

      @tundebakare6887
      They absolutely do. Some even want to sound Nigerian, given the influence of Nigeria across Africa.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

      @@BantuCityDiaries don't forget that at point in time the English Cameroon was part of the Nigerian extended territory given that there was a political party called the democratic party of Nigeria and Cameroon (NCNC )

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @tundebakare6887
      You are something else. My other videos have already documented this.

    • @atauboburiyaunuase2733
      @atauboburiyaunuase2733 Před 16 dny

      The Cameroonian pidgin is so simplistic in nature that it makes it very easy for Cameroonians to understand any form of pidgin being spoken out there. Even the Caribbean patois and the Sierra Leonean Krio. However, Cameroonians understand Nigerians very well, even though the reverse isn't the case. And when I say Cameroonians, I mean just the English side of Cameroon. As history will have it, the English part of Cameroon was part of Nigeria for 46 years. So basically, we have a connection. We have been part of French Cameroon for 63 years. This means for over 100 years, just like the Israelites, we have been in bondage for over a century in two places we have never liked being a part of thanks to colonialism. We would have been okay without colonial influence, but shit happens. We can't even be our own.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 16 dny

      @@atauboburiyaunuase2733 why did they çhoose to be in Cameroon

  • @christellesafricanlifestyl5834

    Yaounde or Abuja does it really matter my people? Let's embrace Africa and aim for a borderless continent. We are one people why the division in the comment section it's sad😢

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 19 dny

      @christellesafricanlifestyl5834
      African is not an identity. It never was and never will be. Africa has always had borders, and there should always be boundaries. What Africa should do is re-demarcate its borders to reflect ethnic identities, republics, or statehood as they were pre-European adventure (slavery and colonisation).
      We can never be the same, as we are not the same. However, we should strive to work together by strengthening what binds us against what doesn't. Striving for a single African nation is naivety at its finest.
      I am a Nigerian of Igbo descent and identify more as an Igbo person than a Nigerian. Nigeria, in fact, is an obstruction to my identity. How, then, do you intend to nationalise Africa when the European-created countries have people who don't accept each other as one?
      PanAfricanism was a placebo sold to ex-slaves in the Western hemisphere who had no connection to Africa but a need to align themselves by skin colour.

    • @aquinasntab71
      @aquinasntab71 Před 12 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries Go read more about the African people and their history.

  • @AdelineAzinwi-ke4bd
    @AdelineAzinwi-ke4bd Před 4 dny

    Who is comparing day and night?

  • @ekeemekaeric3603
    @ekeemekaeric3603 Před 24 dny +4

    Bro everything you said about Abuja are all lies

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @ekeemekaeric3603
      Everything? Even that Abuja is Nigeria's capital? That's very interesting, lol!

  • @ehime1429
    @ehime1429 Před 20 dny +1

    It is very annoying to even dare to compare Abuja to Yaounde, Yaounde is a village to compare with Abuja, no one does that.

  • @bernardnwoye7901
    @bernardnwoye7901 Před 19 dny

    An overall good comparison of both cities.

  • @tundebakare6887
    @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +4

    Cameroonians you say are more law abiding déy play 😂

    • @MajorrBison
      @MajorrBison Před 23 dny +1

      He always says that as if it's a fact. He said the same things in his previous video comparison.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 23 dny

      @@MajorrBison I know he always want to impress his host country viewers 🤣

  • @josephjoseph1491
    @josephjoseph1491 Před 13 dny

    Why will someone compare Abuja with Yaounde 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @kelvinbright8676
    @kelvinbright8676 Před 23 dny

    good video

  • @BestDecor-fn6ud
    @BestDecor-fn6ud Před 22 dny +2

    Oga never compare naija and Cameroon, most especially Abuja and Yaoundé

    • @georgesk5285
      @georgesk5285 Před 21 dnem

      They are very comparable, that is why more and more people are doing it, What does Nigeria have? no water, no electricity

  • @Uty-yo9np
    @Uty-yo9np Před 24 dny +8

    Decent comparison.
    But some of your information about Abuja is incorrect.
    Abuja has intercity rail and it's a standard gauge double track rail system which connects it to Kaduna (another large Nigerian city)
    The road that connects Abuja CBD to the airport is 10 lanes and not six lanes.
    Electricity in Abuja is not as bad as most may seem. The fact that Nigeria is said to have issues with electricity doesn't mean that all 230m Nigerians are having that challenge. There are parts of various cities around Nigeria that have at least 20 hours electricity each passing day (except there's a general grid downtime) besides. There are estates in certain Nigerian cities that run their own electricity grid to ensure 247 access to power supply.
    In terms of the look and feel of a city and advance infrastructure and high-end homes, Abuja is light years ahead of not just Yaounde but also Douala as well. I'd probably compare Yaounde with Benin city, Nigeria or Kumasi in Ghana. Certainly not an Abuja comparison even though both cities are the centre of politics for their respective countries.
    For the shopping mall. Please share pictures of the shopping experience in Yaounde which you said is better than anything you've seen in Abuja.
    Once you take off the CBD of Yaounde with the few adjourning neighbourhoods where politicians reside. The rest of Yaounde might not be more developed by Ile Ife or Ogbomoso. Cos majority of the 4.6m inhabitants of Yaounde are not living in the best of places around the city.
    Even Douala which in my eyes is more modern than Yaounde still has most of the city lacking proper infrastructure. The only nice bits are around the seaport and airport which are not far from each other.
    But in terms of the political situations of both countries. I agree with you and in terms of attitude of the citizens i also agree with you. Truly, Cameroonians are more law abiding and orderly that Nigerians. And politically there's freedom of speech in Nigeria much more than almost any other African country and even some of the developed world.
    Nigerians are vert expressive and wouldn't mind opening their can of worms in public when they talk about their political leaders. But they can also be very patriotic as well

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +1

      @Uty-yo9np
      You make such brilliant points with incredible precision that even though I may disagree with some peripheral components (like the Abuja airport's six or ten lanes. They are six; the adjacent lanes are for the settlements within that axis, they don't necessarily count as additional lane based on road network system), I'm hugely hesitant to bring them up as the overwhelming characterisation you penned there makes them look meaningless.
      Thanks for stopping by, I enjoyed reading everything you wrote there.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

      I was waiting for him to show us the shopping mall I yahoude he doesn't know after south Africa Nigeria has more shopping malls

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +1

      @tundebakare6887
      For Yaounde Mall, please see the link below.
      czcams.com/video/AFOf-POEUec/video.html

    • @Uty-yo9np
      @Uty-yo9np Před 24 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries airport road is 10 lanes. Made up of six express lanes and 4 service lanes. They are not district roads.
      In Nigeria, most 10 lanes roads are designed with service lanes incorporated.
      That's like calling the highway 401 within Toronto Ontario 10 lanes. When it's actually 20 lanes and even more in some sections. Cos the lanes have been carefully separated into Express lanes and service lanes.
      Road designs across the world vary. In equatorial guinea for example. They have "adjacent lanes" like you put it to connect the communities.
      For Nigeria and some other countries. These are part of the technical description of the roads.
      Or are you suggesting that Abuja and Yaounde's airport roads are identical in width since you said they are both 6 lanes

    • @Uty-yo9np
      @Uty-yo9np Před 24 dny +4

      @@BantuCityDiaries I have watched the video on the mall in Yaounde and I haven't seen what makes it better than malls in Abuja. (Take note malls in Abuja and not just one).
      So I'll assume you haven't really been to the malls in Abuja. You perhaps went to a supermarket and decided that's what Abuja's, malls looked like so I'll help you out:
      There are 6 very prominent and large malls with multiple anchor tenants such as ShopRite and they are situated on airport road, wuse zone 5, Apo, Jabi lake mall, cedi plaza.
      There's also Dunes and a host of other malls around the Abuja city area.
      So I suggest you visit Abuja and ask for these places and be the judge of what you see in those malls and compare with the one which you shared the link.
      What I'm willing to give to Yaounde over Abuja might just be the stadium. But everything else, it's day and night difference as it's not at all close. The Abuja road network is one which Nairobi, Accra and Abidjan can't match at all. The only cities in Africa that can match Abuja's road system are Johannesburg, Cape town, greater Cairo (areas around the new development, 6th October city and the new capital of Egypt under construction). Let's not even get started on sidewalks, trees, road detailing, neighbourhood parks (so many of them), etc. The list goes on.
      And for the population, at 4m for Abuja, I believe this does not include the far flung satellite townships. Cos of those are added, abuja becomes Nigeria's second largest conurbation as you can drive upto 80km on a continuously urbanised zone which starts from Suleja through Zuba, Kubwa, maitama, AYA, Nyanya and Mararaba. At least 60km of that drive will be on a flawless 10 lanes express road with multiple flyovers that begin from Nyanya and run all the way to Zuba.

  • @aquinasntab71
    @aquinasntab71 Před 21 dnem +2

    That comparison is not well placed. Abuja is newly developed city after the capital was moved from Lagos. On the other hand Yaounde is an old city.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem +1

      @aquinasntab71
      Cape Town is hundreds of years old. Still, it is 100 years ahead of Abuja on everything.
      London, Berlin, Tokyo, Paris, and Seoul are over a thousand years older, yet hundreds of years ahead of Abuja.
      How old a city is does not matter.

    • @favourkalu8586
      @favourkalu8586 Před 12 dny

      Lagos is old and still far ahead Yaounde in terms of infrastructure and development.

  • @uzoejekwumadu7731
    @uzoejekwumadu7731 Před 24 dny +2

    Very poor analysis and inaccurate information which is evidence of no research. What yardstick did you use to arrive at the present government being better and achieving more than the others in the past 12 years? Inaccurate information on the railway line and Abuja metro line. Could not provide population census of the two cities, etc.

  • @rotimikayode1072
    @rotimikayode1072 Před 24 dny +2

    Abuja was not named after an Hausa individual. It was a small village inside the area that was later named Abuja in its entirety.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny +1

      @rotimikayode1072
      The name Abuja was coined from the Hausa language and derived from Abubakar-Ja. Abubakar-Ja is derived from the name of a person called Mallam Abubakar JA. Abubakar is an Islamic name. Simultaneously, the Hausa language interprets the word "JA" as red or yellow, symbolising Mallam Abubakar's light skin tone. He was called Abubakar-Ja. Abu is the diminutive of Abubakar; the JA was added to form the name Abuja.
      Why are you making assumptions about something you don't understand? Go do some reading, and thank me later.

    • @ugowilliams8437
      @ugowilliams8437 Před 24 dny +1

      ​@@BantuCityDiariesThat is a historical fact, not sentiments. You are absolutely right with your account.

    • @oladapotobi1029
      @oladapotobi1029 Před 22 dny

      Abuja wasn't Hausa name o.😂. There's a whole different tribe that were located in where you call Abuja today

    • @adamumohammed3680
      @adamumohammed3680 Před 15 dny

      ​@@oladapotobi1029Thought Abuja is gbagi.The village of Abuja was established by hausa people who run away from Zaria after some wars ie 13:05
      why there is a place called zariwa in suleja.

  • @temiladealamudun5063
    @temiladealamudun5063 Před 23 dny +2

    Leave Nigeria 🇳🇬 alone and build your country to international standards. All African countries are behind the Western countries development or Singapore or China development. Let Africans stop comparing but focus on developing your countries. African countries are all developing countries

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @temiladealamudun5063
      I am a Nigerian, and I can compare whatever city, country, continent, or anything I want.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @salvationlivingston4871
      There is no "Livingston" in Nigeria, either! Are you British, by any chance?
      I probably wouldn't waste any more time on this. You are not equipped for this.

  • @emmanuelayodele7901
    @emmanuelayodele7901 Před 24 dny +2

    You need to make proper research before passing your information. You were mostly not correct in many of your presentation.

  • @sppower4456
    @sppower4456 Před 22 dny

    Is Yaounde the capita city of Cameroon

  • @nelsonabul4905
    @nelsonabul4905 Před 22 dny

    😂😂😂 funny video

  • @usher8329
    @usher8329 Před 21 dnem +1

    U don't compare Abuja with a dirty capital

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @usher8329
      You must think Abuja is a clean city. Where else have you been to imply that Abuja is clean? Because if you'd been around, you would not have created such an illusion.

  • @user-ks6bi3wz7m
    @user-ks6bi3wz7m Před 19 dny

    How did you get the statistic about the number of christians and Muslim in Abuja and Nigeria?
    Nigeria don't take that in to consideration during census so nobody knows

  • @Donaldgames117
    @Donaldgames117 Před 25 dny +4

    Nice though
    But how would a normal country run a government for more than 10 yrs

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @user-hc5ci8ks2r
      Well, the former German chancellor Angela Merkel ruled for almost 17 years. The UAE and its emirates are lifelong governments. Xi Jinping of China has been there for over 10 years with no sight of ending, as has Vladimir Putin.
      It is not often the longevity but the benevolence and dedication to one's people by the person in charge.

    • @user-kf9en2zi1r
      @user-kf9en2zi1r Před 23 dny

      Initially I wanted to believe that you are objective and fair minded, how ever, this your reply really betrayed your true thoughts. If a country has a truly democratic system and the citizens chose to elect the same person for eternity,then it's ok. Where a particular person keeps winning elections because the system is flawed,then it means the Will of the people doesn't matter. Therefore,no matter how good that eternal leader is,then they people are in bondage.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @user-kf9en2zi1r
      Were you waiting for your turn to type because it would seem you did not read what I wrote. Did Angela Merkel of Germany rig elections for 17 years?
      Are people in China and the UAE in bondage? We have new presidents every four or eight years in Nigeria and most African countries; where are we compared to the UAE, China, Russia, Qatar, or Bahrain?

    • @user-kf9en2zi1r
      @user-kf9en2zi1r Před 22 dny

      Hey young man, don't support what is wrong. If free and fair elections is allowed in your country, what will you lose? It appears you benefit some how from the flawed system that has denied Cameroonians their God given freedom of choice. Don't come and tell me that the charade that is conducted periodically is elections. If you can't stand other people's opinions,then what are you doing on CZcams? You expect everyone to swallow what ever warped opinion you throw up on your channel? Go back and check how many times different people asked you to do a proper research before coming online. Take that as a positive piece of advice and improve on your research, and in no time your channel will be the better for it. Instead you are here throwing insults and innuendos on people who spent time and data, to watch your content, and you expect they will come back to watch another poo from you?

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @user-kf9en2zi1r
      "Hey young man" Is that how you communicate with people? Who said I was Cameroonian?

  • @austinestar1940
    @austinestar1940 Před 16 dny

    This man !!! so you are still on the go? I last saw you in Botswana 🇧🇼 now you are in Cameroon 🇨🇲 😅😅

  • @oladapotobi1029
    @oladapotobi1029 Před 22 dny +1

    Maybe you should take this down and do uour assignments well. You are not correct with your information about Abuja

  • @ongoloneville8210
    @ongoloneville8210 Před 19 dny

    The quality of life Yaounde supersede that of Abuja

  • @jimmyonana3026
    @jimmyonana3026 Před 19 dny +1

    I will choose Cameroon 1 billion times over Nigeria & there's no comparison here cus Cameroon is the heart of African meaning Africa miniature AKA All Africa in one Country & Cameroon host close to 10 million Nigerians who migrated to Cameroon for greener pasture & sorry Cameroon was annexed by the germans not colonized.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 19 dny

      @jimmyonana3026
      "Cameroon host [sic] close to 10 million Nigerians who migrated to Cameroon for greener pasture."
      Could you clarify where you found the figure of 10 million? Considering Cameroon's population of 26 million, it's quite a significant claim to suggest that almost half are Nigerians. Is that your understanding?
      Well, that's preposterous!
      Germany colonised Cameroon. Most colonised African countries were annexed, leading to colonisation. You are indulging in semantics.

  • @malvytheoo
    @malvytheoo Před 19 dny +1

    This comparison isn't supposed to happen to begin with.

  • @dayoadeyeye201
    @dayoadeyeye201 Před 21 dnem

    Yaounde is in the league of some state capitals in Nigeria. Cameroon is light years behind Nigeria.

  • @user-zq3ce5sm7s
    @user-zq3ce5sm7s Před 22 dny +1

    Abuja is also hilly. Abuja is not flat.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @user-zq3ce5sm7s
      Abuja's topography is characterised by savannah and crystalline rocks, not hills. Whilst Yaoundé, on the other hand, is characterised by hills and rainforests.

  • @giftokereke3145
    @giftokereke3145 Před 24 dny +2

    Why do you guys like to compare west African cities ? Is it necessary except you re comparing them to western cities if not is not necessary.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @giftokereke3145
      No city in Africa (except South Africa) can compare to anything in the West.

    • @giftokereke3145
      @giftokereke3145 Před 24 dny +1

      @@BantuCityDiaries I said so becuz it looks like competition, which is better and which is not . If a city is great then let it compete outside the continent.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @giftokereke3145
      Fair point. I will consider a trip around Europe and East Asia.
      Thank you!

    • @Chief_Commander_MBE
      @Chief_Commander_MBE Před 23 dny

      Just dey play how many countries have you travelled too?​@@BantuCityDiaries

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @Chief_Commander_MBE
      85. I have been to some ten times over. How about you?

  • @semiyusulaimon5841
    @semiyusulaimon5841 Před 24 dny

    You are of PT

  • @Chukwudi-ze6li
    @Chukwudi-ze6li Před 16 dny

    A city is measured by human welfare, not by infrastructure. Yaunde is better.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 16 dny +1

      @Chukwudi-ze6li
      You make a valid point. It is Yaoundé, though.

  • @ekeemekaeric3603
    @ekeemekaeric3603 Před 24 dny +2

    Bro Abuja have electricity please

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @ekeemekaeric3603
      I have owned a house in Abuja for 14 years. It has limited power and no water supply. I have a borehole that extracts water from the earth's surface into my overhead tank, which then pumps it into my house.
      Like most homes in Abuja and Nigeria, I also have a generator, which consumes diesel at a rate comparable to an elephant's. I've averaged six hours of electricity per day for those 14 years. There have been weeks when I had no power supply; this happens one to three times every year.
      What is wrong with you? What has being honest done to you?

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @oboraoyama6255
      Okay, sir!

  • @DonLionel
    @DonLionel Před 23 dny

    vous aussi..... comparaison de quoi?

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @DonLionel
      Comparer les deux villes capitales de deux pays voisins. Ca ne ta pas plu?

    • @DonLionel
      @DonLionel Před 23 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries Ce que je veux dire par la c'est l'ecart est trop flagrant.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @DonLionel
      Les comparaisons, parfois, ne sont pas toujours pour trouver un gagnant. Tout à fait, je vois où tu partais avec ça.

    • @DonLionel
      @DonLionel Před 23 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries Pour quelqu'un qui connait un peu Les Deux villes.... En fin bref. Le tout dans la bienveillance.

  • @emmanuelayodele7901
    @emmanuelayodele7901 Před 24 dny +3

    Did you say Abuja is the third most populated city in Nigeria or the third largest?... Its neither of both. Youve gat to update yourself. But you tried i must commend your effort.
    Talking about electricity some parts of Abuja enjoys constant electricity they are called BAND A. In Nigeria we have band A, B, C,D and i Think E.. read about that as well. .. good job bro.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @emmanuelayodele7901
      Band A receives up to 20 hours of power, but nowhere in Nigeria receives 20 hours of power, 365 days a year. Sell that fiction to non-Nigerians.
      Abuja is the third-most populous city in Nigeria. Consider that a lesson, and thank me later.
      Thanks for stopping by!

    • @emmanuelayodele7901
      @emmanuelayodele7901 Před 24 dny +3

      @@BantuCityDiaries do you know Nigeria more than myself? Even in Warri where I live there is an area called ejeba shell estate.. they get more than 20 hours year in year out. There's also a place called NNPC housing estate here in Warri that enjoys the same bro... Don't think you know more than you actually do bro...

    • @emmanuelayodele7901
      @emmanuelayodele7901 Před 24 dny +1

      @@BantuCityDiaries as for population bro U are not still correct.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @emmanuelayodele7901
      statisticstimes.com/demographics/country/nigeria-cities-population.php
      You can use other official sources; you don't have to use mine.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 22 dny

      @helendamo3853
      With your potty mouth, you sure live in an alternate reality. I guess you are trying so hard to impress non-Nigerians with that fiction.

  • @kennethmukete6375
    @kennethmukete6375 Před 21 dnem

    U should be comparing Abuja with Dubai bruh

  • @emmanuelanaekwe1093
    @emmanuelanaekwe1093 Před 21 dnem

    Talking of water system he is right with Yaounde.
    But i was in douala Cameroom 5 years ago and it's was more populated than Yaounde.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @emmanuelanaekwe1093
      Douala has always been, but it has succumbed to Yaoundé based on the latest figures.
      www.google.com = Yaoundé population 2024 | Douala population 2024
      Use your brain, not brawn!
      Source one:
      www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/cities/20365/yaounde/population#:~:text=The%20current%20metro%20area%20population,a%204.15%25%20increase%20from%202021.
      Source two:
      worldpopulationreview.com/world-cities/yaounde-population

  • @lawalnuradeen2984
    @lawalnuradeen2984 Před 21 dnem

    Abuja is the best 🎉🎉🎉🇳🇬

  • @patrickpedro6458
    @patrickpedro6458 Před 23 dny +1

    Don't measure Cameron failure with Nigeria, Nigeria has its all

  • @user-zx9vk4ks6z
    @user-zx9vk4ks6z Před 20 dny

    Younde at least grew naturally and is organically linked to the surrounding peoples and cultures.
    Abuja's only raison d'etre is to share oil rent among the corrupt tribal pseudo-elite that gather there.
    There is no linkage to anywhere except maybe Kaduna and nomadic herders whose cattle roam about the major roads, no viable business except vote trading and other complex transactions that add no value to anything.

  • @esther2462
    @esther2462 Před 23 dny +1

    Please leave Nigeria alone, we beg 🙏🏾

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @esther2462
      Un-Nigerian me, or include my channel in your block list-problem solved.

  • @waroniabenson8554
    @waroniabenson8554 Před 19 dny

    it's like comparing lion and rat

  • @emmanuelmoro9552
    @emmanuelmoro9552 Před 24 dny +1

    Do you really know about the shopping malls in Abuja, Nigeria and the Christian population?

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @emmanuelmoro9552
      Jabi Lake Mall, Airport Road Mall, and the other Novare stall-like malls in Abuja?
      See the Yaounde mall in the link below:
      czcams.com/video/AFOf-POEUec/video.html

    • @esther2462
      @esther2462 Před 23 dny

      This mall ☝️is not as beautiful as many malls in Abuja

    • @russelstephan6342
      @russelstephan6342 Před 22 dny

      ​@BantuCityDiaries that mall is a joke tho 😂

  • @SMISSEY1
    @SMISSEY1 Před 22 dny

    No place I would rather be but Yaounde my place of birth.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem

      @SMISSEY1
      The nostalgia of childhood is overwhelming. It is second-to-none.

  • @adeseghaolusegun3513
    @adeseghaolusegun3513 Před 19 dny

    Come to Abuja and see yourself than trying to get more viewers with no evidence

  • @abimbolaidowu9532
    @abimbolaidowu9532 Před 19 dny

    Parochial assessment

  • @learnitidiomas9616
    @learnitidiomas9616 Před 20 dny +1

    There are some errors in this comparison. First of all, Yaoundé is not the most populated nor most developed city of Cameroun, douala is. Second, the images were made not to show the beautiful part of Yaoundé... all I saw was the best part of Abuja against the worst of Yaoundé. Even when you talk of the trainway station what you show is not Yaoundé. I know Cameroon has some problems But Yaoundé doesn't lose to Abuja, nor Douala to Lagos. And just to prove my point even the big malls you spoke of about Yaoundé you weren't able to show because it's not very far from downtown. Nigeria I already has the highest economy in Africa. If you need to hide the best parts of Cameroun before comparing the two cities then it lets me know we're not that bad indeed.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @learnitidiomas9616
      Yaoundé has overtaken Douala in population. See the links below. Although you make excellent points, which I agree with, I apologise for not showing the best parts of Yaoundé. However, the bits shown of Abuja aren't its best parts either.
      I'm afraid I only have to disagree with two points: Yaoundé has overtaken Douala in population, and I did not highlight the best parts of Yaoundé. For the latter, my sincere apology: I will do better next time.
      www.google.com = Yaoundé population 2024 | Douala population 2024
      Source one:
      www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/cities/20365/yaounde/population#:~:text=The%20current%20metro%20area%20population,a%204.15%25%20increase%20from%202021.
      Source two:
      worldpopulationreview.com/world-cities/yaounde-population
      Thanks for stopping by.

    • @learnitidiomas9616
      @learnitidiomas9616 Před 20 dny +1

      @@BantuCityDiaries Liked your answer. If you want we could do another video together I'll be glade to help... like when my country is spoken of

  • @nanayao9905
    @nanayao9905 Před 20 dny

    How do you compare USA and Burundi. Cameroun is no way closed to any African country when it comes to development

  • @ovorado-theplacetoexcel9530

    Stop comparing cities, African CZcamsrs! Each city in the world has it's own uniqueness and cannot be adequately compared. It's like saying "comparing Paris to New York", each has their vibes and are both good.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 21 dnem +1

      @ovorado-theplacetoexcel9530
      You wrote: "Stop comparing cities, African CZcamsrs!"
      BCD's response: Why not? Comparing means looking for similarities. Why shouldn't that be done?
      You wrote: "Each city in the world has it's [sic] own uniqueness and cannot be adequately compared."
      BCD's response: You have a skewed definition of what comparison is all about. I think you are using "critiquing" and "comparing" interchangeably. Even so, both are absolutely healthy.
      You wrote: "It's like saying "comparing Paris to New York", each has their vibes and are both good."
      BCD's response: There you go; you have just indulged in comparing. Each has its own vibe, and both are good. Comparing does exactly that, highlighting their variants, unique features, picturesque landscapes, traditions, and so on. What could be wrong with that?

  • @joshuaudom8716
    @joshuaudom8716 Před 20 dny

    Abuja is the sixth largest city in Nigeria not third. Do your research well

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @joshuaudom8716
      statisticstimes.com/demographics/country/nigeria-cities-population.php
      It looks like you are more in need of a research.

    • @joshuaudom8716
      @joshuaudom8716 Před 20 dny +2

      @@BantuCityDiaries
      Lagos
      Kano
      Ibadan
      Benin city
      Portharcourt
      Abuja. There's no way Abuja can be the third largest city. Bros you are not from Nigeria and as such, you can never tell me what I know about Nigeria

  • @IkhideroJupitus
    @IkhideroJupitus Před 20 dny

    Abuja is alo a hilly city

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @IkhideroJupitus
      Abuja's topography is characterised by savannah and crystalline rocks, not hills. Whilst Yaoundé, on the other hand, is characterised by hills and rainforests.

  • @abubakariya599
    @abubakariya599 Před 20 dny

    How can you start compared Yaoundé and Abuja never Abuja is already gone and we'll build

  • @user-zx9vk4ks6z
    @user-zx9vk4ks6z Před 20 dny

    Nobody is even addressing the central issue: why should resources from all over the country be concentrated in one area called capital?
    It happened before in Nigeria where oil revenues from the eastern region was concentrated in Lagos in the name of capital. Now the Yorubas have seized the city asking everyone to leave and demolishing the homes and businesses of Ibos. Now you people have started again with Abuja which properly speaking is the capital of Northern Nigeria, except for those deceiving themselves.

  • @tundebakare6887
    @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

    Make your research before doing videos

  • @onyemaohabuike7974
    @onyemaohabuike7974 Před 5 dny

    This your Abuja development comparison with previous administrations is such a fallacy.

  • @user-sm8sh8qw2o
    @user-sm8sh8qw2o Před 15 dny

    Oga kano is no where popular that Abuja.

  • @jerrodmboh8236
    @jerrodmboh8236 Před 21 dnem

    Who is comparing a nation with 250 million people with that of just 30 million people hmmmm people di try. Do you even know the meaning of economy? Economy is the people. Nigerian has the right to be richer than Cameroon in all style, do you know how much taxes the Nigerian government received from 250 millions of people each year? Do you want to compare it with that of a small population like Cameroon hmmmm, please compare Nigerians with countries in Europe with the same population

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @jerrodmboh8236
      No, sir, I don't know what economy is. So, let's use your economic formula.
      Example one:
      Algeria has a population of 46 million, a gross GDP of $266 billion, and a per capita income of $5,722.
      Your mighty Nigeria has a population of 225 million, a gross GDP of $252 billion, and a per capita income of $1,109.
      Example two:
      South Africa's population is 62 million, with a gross GDP of $373 billion and a per capita income of $5,975.
      Example three:
      Switzerland = 8 million, GPD gross = $870 billion, per capita = $99,000.
      West Africa's population is 449 million, with a gross GDP of $561 billion and a per capita income of $1,200.
      I hope your brilliant knowledge of the economy, against my lack of it, now daunts you.
      Thanks for stopping by.

    • @user-zx9vk4ks6z
      @user-zx9vk4ks6z Před 18 dny

      Always boasting vacuously to obscure rational discussions. When was a credible census conducted that confirmed that Nigeria has 250m people? Even if it does, that population is fractured along ethnic, religious lines and other irreconcilable differences which has claimed millions of lives, over 3 million lives in 1966-70 genocide alone. Right now, there are dozens of interminable asymmetrical armed conflicts going on in the ill conceived contraption of a country. A large number of the so-called population is actually nothing but illiterate unemployed and unemployable almajiris used in vote rigging but with zero contribution to the economy. Now you want to compare with Europe!. Meanwhile hundreds of school children are routinely abducted by ransom -seeking groups with no consequences. How much organisation is needed to house, feed, provide medical care for hundreds of children in captivity and what banks process the ransom payments through what system undetected? Bomboclats!

  • @jimmyonana3026
    @jimmyonana3026 Před 19 dny

    163 million people are in heavy poverty 😂🤣🤣 & close to 10 million Nigerians have migrated to Cameroon for greener pastures so which country is better now ??😂🤣🤣 So Na Cameroon & Ghana wuna dey compare Nigeria with 😂😊 Compare Nigeria with South Africa let see, or Egypt and Ethiopia etc. Nigeria a country of close to 300 million people but yet unable to meet to standard 😂😅😂 it shows if Cameroon gets that population they will do better than Nigeria 😂😅😂

  • @BRICKStv9864
    @BRICKStv9864 Před 23 dny

    How do u say Nigerian Abuja is more corrupt when Nigeria has successfully changed from one democratic govt to another with the hitches

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 23 dny

      @BRICKStv9864
      It would appear that your measurement of corruption is based on the transfer of power from one president to the next. Unfortunately, that's not how you measure corruption.

    • @user-zx9vk4ks6z
      @user-zx9vk4ks6z Před 18 dny

      W
      hat democratic transition are you talking about? The one that seeks to actively exclude all Ibos -25% of the population- from central governance through criminal gang ups? Go and rest.

  • @tundebakare6887
    @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

    You lie Abuja has more Christians thàn Muslims I'm from Abuja by the way (indigíene)

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 24 dny

      @tundebakare6887
      I understand your frustration, bro, but I was not directing that at the indigenous Abuja people. I was talking about Abuja's residents. The state of origin, or in this case, the land of origin, Abuja, is not a state, and that framework does not apply to Abuja, so every resident is considered an Abuja native and can run for every office. The city's residents include more Muslims than Christians.
      You can do your research.
      Thanks again for stopping by!

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 Před 24 dny +1

      @BantuCityDiaries the Karu satellite town which is the biggest in the Amac has more Christians than Muslims and also Gwagwalada area council and bwari has more Christians than Muslims. In the outskirts of Abuja like zuba and Suleja madalla I wil say there's a share of 50/50 population of both religion

    • @tzee4281
      @tzee4281 Před 24 dny

      @@tundebakare6887with this your name you are not indigene and the man may be right .

    • @benbewa
      @benbewa Před 23 dny

      I am not nigerian,but I have always thought that abuja had more muslims than christians coz I always see people dressed like arabs ushering their cows right in the middle of the city.They are given priority even on highways.That is something you will never ever see in eastern or southern africa.

    • @ominiekwe7241
      @ominiekwe7241 Před 23 dny

      Don't mind him

  • @blackheritageQ
    @blackheritageQ Před 20 dny

    Is so disrespectful comparing Abuja to Yaounde, Yaounde can only be compared with Osogbo the osun state capital not Abuja.

  • @timosilver1
    @timosilver1 Před 20 dny

    You didn't do proper research.

  • @HarishHammanjidda-jc2nb
    @HarishHammanjidda-jc2nb Před 21 dnem

    You are comparing the incomparable

  • @ukokaluuko4649
    @ukokaluuko4649 Před 21 dnem

    Your coverage of Abuja was not representative. There is really no basis for comparing Abuja with Yaoundé.

    • @georgesk5285
      @georgesk5285 Před 21 dnem

      No basis for doing what?. This video was done by one of yours, a Nigerian who probably lived in Yaounde for some time. He knows better than you, so sit quiet

  • @user-zq3ce5sm7s
    @user-zq3ce5sm7s Před 22 dny

    Its a lie. Abuja has equal number of Christians and Muslims.

  • @digitaledu6624
    @digitaledu6624 Před 21 dnem

    You gotta compare Yaounde to Ibadan or Enugu. It doesn't come close to Abuja.

  • @user-zx9vk4ks6z
    @user-zx9vk4ks6z Před 20 dny

    3.33 Bollocks!

  • @ifeanyianiekwena8938
    @ifeanyianiekwena8938 Před 21 dnem

    Christians are more in Abuja

  • @thabo3866
    @thabo3866 Před 19 dny +1

    Not much difference

  • @ojosamuel1123
    @ojosamuel1123 Před 23 dny

    This is an insult comparing abuja to younde

  • @rebeccabernasco
    @rebeccabernasco Před 21 dnem

    HE IS TOO OLD. WHAT IS WRONG WITH AFRICAN LEADERS? 😢😢😢

  • @akwariiroha9206
    @akwariiroha9206 Před 18 dny

    You really sound bitter and spiteful, your information is both incorrect and biased!!

  • @timcamer4702
    @timcamer4702 Před 21 dnem

    You are a liar . Yaoundé has never overtaken Douala . Yaoundé is no way near Abudja . An other lie is that majority of people are bilingual in Yaoundé, that far from the truth. In inner you barely find a person who fluent in English. They all speak French

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @timcamer4702
      If only your brain was as sharp as your tongue. Why waste time being uncouth? Just google it.
      www.google.com = Yaoundé population 2024 | Douala population 2024
      Use your brain, not brawn!
      Source one:
      www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/cities/20365/yaounde/population#:~:text=The%20current%20metro%20area%20population,a%204.15%25%20increase%20from%202021.
      Source two:
      worldpopulationreview.com/world-cities/yaounde-population

    • @timcamer4702
      @timcamer4702 Před 20 dny

      @@BantuCityDiaries born and raised in Douala. Have lived in Yaoundé, Lagos before moving to America. I don’t need google. I really don’t what you gain from being that dishonest ? Abuja is one of finest city on continent. You should be ashamed for putting it side by side with the big ghetto called Yaoundé.

    • @BantuCityDiaries
      @BantuCityDiaries  Před 20 dny

      @timcamer4702
      You lack basic knowledge of analytics, empirical research, geography, or the decency even to read. By that, without disrespect, you are not worthy of engagement.
      Bye!

  • @mavberil.2059
    @mavberil.2059 Před 20 dny

    Yaounde is not that useful .

  • @awacherif1689
    @awacherif1689 Před 17 dny

    Cameroon is horrible