Daughters of jezebel confraternity of saint
Daughters of jezebel confraternity of saint
Daughters of jezebel confraternity of saint augustine.
Confraternities in Nigeria
Cult-like student groups in Nigeria
Confraternities in Nigeria are secretive student groups within Nigerian higher education that have been involved in violence and organized crime since the 1980s.
The exact death toll of confraternity activities is unclear. One estimate in 2002 was that 250 people had been killed in campus cult-related murders in the previous decade,[1] while the Exam Ethics Project lobby group estimated that 115 students and teachers had been killed between 1993 and 2019.[2]
History
Origin
Main article: Pyrate Confraternity
In 1952, author Wole Soyinka (later a Nobel Prize winner) and a group of six friends formed the Pyrate Confraternity at the elite University College, Ibadan, then part of the University of London.[3] They dubbed themselves "Magnificent Seven" (G7).
Soyinka and his confraternity peers observed that the university was dominated by wealthy students associated with the colonia