This Writer鈥檚 Diary entry is dedicated to the NDLEA officer and lover of Naira Life stories identified herein as “Dumbo 2.”

I talk to Nigerians a lot about international travel for our flagship series Abroad Life, which I write every week.
But a recent personal trip reminded me of the one aspect of travel we often overlook: the awkward, expensive ritual in Nigeria of actually getting from the airport entrance to the plane.
“So, what do you have for me?”
When the balding immigration officer asked, “So, what do you have for me?” I didn’t refuse him out of some grand principle. Since I鈥檇 stepped into Terminal 2 of Murtala Muhammed International Airport, I had already parted with almost 鈧3,000.
Pretty much everyone in uniform was extraordinarily chatty, their sheepish grins confessing exactly what they really wanted. And I gave鈥攆ive hundred Naira here, a thousand there.
They were mostly nice about it when they asked.
鈥淒rop something for me.鈥
鈥淒o well for me na.鈥
I obliged. I was already behind on time and it kept things moving smoothly.
But after checking my luggage and getting my boarding pass, I swapped my remaining Naira for dollars. The smallest bill I had now was $10. There was no world in which I was giving Baldy $10 just to stamp my passport鈥攐r as I like to call it, doing his job.
鈥淕o and meet him鈥
Hearing I had no more cash to give, he set down his stamp and pointed to a row of desks to the right. 鈥淵ou see that my oga with the glasses?鈥 He pointed to a stocky man in a blue-and-white horizontal striped polo shirt. He was the only one not in uniform.
鈥淕o and meet him.鈥 I could sense I was in for some drama.
As I strolled over, I heard the boarding announcement for my flight echo over the airport public address system.
Horizontal Stripes gave me the regular grilling: Where are you going? What for? How long? The only new question was 鈥淲here鈥檚 your hotel reservation?鈥
I was travelling for a fully-funded writing workshop; the organisers had sorted everything. When I told him, he wouldn鈥檛 budge, and insisted on seeing the reservation.
I had to call my contact person, wait for her to send the reservation as a PDF, and show it to him. He studied it, then asked a more ridiculous question: 鈥淗ow much cash do you have on you?鈥
When I told him, he shook his head. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not enough. You need at least $500 in cash to travel to any African country.鈥
I knew he was making stuff up. No such blanket requirement exists, especially not when you already have your visa.
If you鈥檙e getting a visa on arrival, some countries do ask for proof of funds, but that鈥檚 done by their own immigration services when you arrive. It鈥檚 certainly not the job of the Nigerian Immigration Service to stop you from travelling because you don鈥檛 have enough pocket money.
None of my explanations got through to him, though. Still holding onto my passport, he walked away to speak with other officers, acting like I wasn鈥檛 even there.
I stood there, doing the mental math of how long it would take to go back to the money changers. I actually set off to do it too, but on my way, two ticketing staff recognised me and offered to intervene. They walked me back to his desk and spoke to Horizontal Stripes while more minutes ticked away.
After they left, he waved me over, but kept me standing there while he chatted with other officers. I heard another boarding call.
鈥淥ya, tell me the real reason for your trip,鈥 he finally said, waving my passport like a hand fan. I repeated the same things I had said earlier.
He stared at me for several moments, then finally asked another officer to hand him a stamp.
But it wasn鈥檛 over. My next obstacle was the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) desk.
#NairaLife
There I met Dumbo 1 and Dumbo 2. From their desk, I could see my gate, where the short queue was getting shorter by the minute. The final boarding call echoed over the PA system.
First, Dumbo 1 took my passport, passed it to Dumbo 2, and then repeated the usual questions: Destination? Purpose? Duration?
Dumbo 1 was direct: 鈥淪o, what do you have for us?鈥 I breathed a tired sigh as I thought through my options. Was I going to risk more silliness like what happened at immigration, or was I finally parting with that $10 bill?
Dumbo 2, more suave than his partner, stepped in during my moment of hesitation with one of the oddest conversations I鈥檝e had recently.
鈥淪o, what do you do?鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 a writer.鈥
鈥淎h. Writers make a lot of money na. I bet you write about all this crypto stuff?鈥
Do people actually make that much writing about crypto? Am I in the wrong niche? If you don鈥檛 see any more 91大神 stories from me, just know I鈥檝e gone to look for money in crypto writing.
I told Dumbo 2 I didn’t write about crypto. 鈥淓hn? I like reading sha,鈥 he said. Who would have guessed? He certainly had me fooled up to that point.
鈥淒o you know 91大神?鈥 he asked.
I was almost sure he was pulling my leg. Maybe he鈥檇 googled my name from my passport while I was talking to Dumbo 1. But then he started telling me about his favourite Naira Life stories.
Shoutout to the amazing Tife Oni; there鈥檚 an NDLEA officer who really loves your work.
鈥淚 always find it so interesting,鈥 he said. 鈥淩eading stories about how people can just 10x their income.鈥 He was grinning from ear to ear just talking about it.
I was honestly fascinated, but I had one eye on the queue at my boarding gate. Only a couple of people left.
No wahala
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have any more cash,鈥 I interrupted Dumbo 2鈥檚 narration of Naira Life stories.
Dumbo 1, ever the direct one, did not miss a beat. 鈥淣o wahala,鈥 he said, as he slid a piece of paper to me. It had an Opay account number written on it. I looked over; just one person was left at the gate. I pulled out my phone.
As I opened my bank app, I said to Dumbo 2, 鈥淵ou know, I actually write for 91大神. I write Abroad Life.鈥
鈥凌别补濒濒测?鈥
鈥渊耻辫.鈥
With 鈧2,000 less in my account, I rushed towards my gate. As I went, Dumbo 2 said that he鈥檇 look out for my name next time he was on the 91大神 website.
Well, this one鈥檚 for you, Dumbo 2. I know your dream is probably to be featured in a Naira Life story about how you 10x鈥檇 your income. This is likely the closest you鈥檒l get. But hey, you鈥檙e on 91大神. Enjoy it.
Beggars who don鈥檛 give you a choice
In January 2026, when the streamer , the constant begging he encountered shocked the internet and led to Nigeria being labelled 鈥淎begistan.鈥 In a country where , begging has become ingrained in our culture.
But what happens at the airport is different. A beggar on the street appeals to your mercy. But when the person asking wears a uniform and can hold your passport until you miss a flight, that isn’t just begging anymore.
It鈥檚 a shakedown. It鈥檚 extortion. I don鈥檛 have a clever name to capture it like Abegistan. I鈥檒l let you all come up with that. But funny labels hide a sinister reality beneath the humour: a culture of entitlement that turns every person in uniform into a personal toll collector. I don’t have a name for it yet, but maybe it shouldn’t have one at all. Because it shouldn鈥檛 exist in the first place. It鈥檚 a culture that needs to end.
We want to hear about your personal experiences that reflect how politics or public systems affect daily life in Nigeria. Share your story with us 鈥攚e鈥檇 love to hear from you!




