Nollywood-style weddings land on the cutting room floor - The Mail & Guardian

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As the coronavirus restrictions on mass gatherings persist, Nigeria is having to tone down the grand events they cherish

Yemisi Ajeojo and Charles Isidi had been planning their wedding long before they became officially engaged in December last year. “We had already settled on a wedding date before there was an official ring-giving,” Ajeojo tellsThe couple met on Facebook in 2015. Isidi was a frequent writer on the social-networking website, and Ajeojo, a home-sick Nigerian in the United Kingdom, was looking for more compatriot writers to connect with.

This had always been Ajeojo’s ideal — having all the loose ends of her wedding tied up months before the date. It was only a matter of weeks before their stress-free wedding would take place.Then the coronavirus hit Nigeria.When Nigeria recorded its first case of the virus in February, the couple didn’t give any thought to the possibility of a full-blown spread across the country: “It didn’t look like a disease that would scale,” Isidi says.

With couples having to suspend or postpone their weddings indefinitely, these businesses have been hard-hit by the loss of the steady flow of income that Nigeria’s thriving wedding culture provides. The General Manager of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency Dolapo Fasawe addresses staff upon arrival to a formative session for agents training leaders of various unions who are scheduled to train members on measures to curb the spread of COVID-19 coronavirus ahead of the expected gradual easing of the lockdown from next week at Odoguyan in Ikorodu district of Lagos, on April 30, 2020.

“We just have to make our clients understand why they must not lower their standards because the capacity is smaller. Now, more than ever, [they] can still have that luxury event of [their] dreams with even more personalised details,” Borha says.Problems remain for couples who want to get married right now. Inter-state travel and domestic flights are still prohibited.

“Considering we should be living together, it’s not been the easiest thing,” Ajeojo says. “The next time I see [Charles], I’m just going to hug him till my body enters his body.”

 

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