Omasan Buwa

Omasan Tokurbo Buwa (born 1965, London) is a social worker and media commentator in Nigeria. She holds a Bachelor of Laws from the University of North London. Through her career, Buwa has worked as a model, television presenter, restaurateur and actress.[1]

Omasan Tokurbo Buwa
TitleMost Beautiful Girl in Nigeria 1987
Beauty pageant titleholder
Major
competition(s)
Miss Nigeria 1987 (Finalist), Miss Intercontinental (Finalist)

Childhood and personal life

Buwa was born in Paddington, London. At seven years, she moved to Nigeria with her mother who was a teacher and the head of the catering department of Nigerian Airways. Buwa attended Government College Ikorodu. There, she showed interest in reading, debating and track and field sports. Buwa enrolled at the University of Maiduguri to study the English language. Buwa became a fashion model. Her agent was the Pandora model agency. Buwa worked for designers including Dakova and Labanella and for advertising agencies such as Insight Communication and Rosabel .[2][3] Buwa married and had a daughter and twin sons. She later divorced.

Pageants

In 1987, Buwa competed in the Miss Nigeria pageant and lost to Stella Okoye, but won the second Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria pageant, representing Warri. Her coronation was marred by protests from the audience who favored first runner-up Niki Onuaguluchi who had flown from Los Angeles to compete in the pageant. The judges defended their decision on grounds that Onuaguluchi, whose height was 5'6 stood a lesser chance than rivals at the forthcoming Miss Intercontinental. Buwa, on her part, accused her of bringing in her supporters to cheer her to victory. In her year as the winner, the Nigerian press described Buwa's as unconventional and tomboyish.[4] In 1988, Buwa represented Nigeria in the Miss Universe, Miss Intercontinental, and Miss World competitions. Then, she re-enrolled at the University of Maiduguri. However, the institution's predominantly Muslim authority declined Buwa's enrolment because she had participated in pageants.[4]

Career

Buwa worked as an actress. She took the lead in the movie, Scattered Pictures, and in the soap operas Memories and Ripples. She also worked as the host of weekend breakfast television program Morning Ride broadcast on NTA 2 Channel 5. Buwa also appeared in regular segments on BEN Television, London. tabloid newspapers featured Buwa.

Buwa purchased a jazz bar and restaurant in Lagos. She then opened an aesthetics and cosmetology beauty business. After this, Buwa opened a modelling agency called "Queens LT" with the fashion designer, Funmi Ajila.[5]

Buwa then moved to New York City, where she worked as a make-up artist. Her clients included Naomi Campbell and Mary J. Blige.[6]

Buwa returned to England and in 2002, received a law degree from the North London University. She then returned to the US where she was employed as an attorney, a social worker for special needs children. Buwa also worked part-time as a model in Ohio.

Buwa writes columns for The Diasporan Star, an American-based Nigerian magazine.[7] She also writes the column "Generation Max" for Whispaz Magazine.

Social work

In 2009, Buwa returned to Nigeria to continue her social work. Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan, the governor of Delta state, Nigeria, supported Buwa's program called "Rise", which helped to meet the needs of people with disabilities. In Nigeria, Buwa has appeared on socio-political radio programs and has written for magazines. She also created an entity called "Maximillia 3", which mentors young people interested in a career in the media and discourages abuse of young women in the beauty pageant industry. Buwa's sons have helped to expand the project[8]

gollark: I feel like if we had saner institutions it would probably be possible to mass-manufacture better-quality masks eventually (it's been two-ish months since COVID-19 got to "obviously a bad problem" levels), but we... haven't really?
gollark: Yes, that seems to mostly concur with what I read.
gollark: Wait, are we talking homemade masks, surgical masks, or actual respirator things?
gollark: It seems a good idea complicated by the issues of actually getting enough and the early insistence by some dodecahedra that MaSkS DoN'T woRk.
gollark: Still, we can't *stay* in lockdown for an indefinite amount of time, it definitely has to be a temporary thing, and there seems to be a distinct lack of plans for dealing with COVID-19 after that.

See also

References

  1. "About Us". www.thediasporanstaronline.com. 29 September 2014. Archived from the original on 29 September 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  2. "dead link". news.biafranigeriaworld.com. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  3. Ukonu, Nkarenyi (1 April 2012). "Unlike now, beauty pageants never opened doors – Omasan Buwa". The Punch. Lagos, Nigeria. Archived from the original on 8 April 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  4. "News -- I was a tomboy–Omasan Buwa, Ex-beauty queen". odili.net. 12 August 2016. Archived from the original on 12 August 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  5. Ukonu, Nkarenyi (1 April 2012). "Unlike now, beauty pageants never opened doors – Omasan Buwa". The Punch. Lagos, Nigeria. Archived from the original on 8 April 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  6. Unlike now, beauty pageants never opened doors — Omasan Buwa Archived 8 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  7. The Diasporan Star Archived 25 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Diasporan Star website.
  8. Ukonu, Nkarenyi (1 April 2012). "Unlike now, beauty pageants never opened doors – Omasan Buwa". The Punch. Lagos, Nigeria. Archived from the original on 8 April 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
Preceded by
Lynda Chuba-Ikpeazu
Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria
1987
Succeeded by
Bianca Onoh
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