Bilal Fawaz

British Nigerian professional boxer (born 1988) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bilal Kelvin Fawaz (born 3 April 1988) is a stateless professional boxer born in Nigeria. He has held the British and Commonwealth super-welterweight titles since February 2026. As an amateur Fawaz was Amateur Boxing Association of England light-middleweight champion and represented England internationally six times. He is variously credited as Bilal Fawaz or Kelvin Fawaz and in artistic output as NaijaBoy and as State Lezz.

Nickname
Machine[1]
BornBilal Kelvin Fawaz
(1988-04-03) 3 April 1988 (age 38)[1]
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)[1]
Quick facts Personal information, Nickname ...
Bilal Fawaz
Personal information
Nickname
Machine[1]
BornBilal Kelvin Fawaz
(1988-04-03) 3 April 1988 (age 38)[1]
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)[1]
WeightSuper-welterweight
Boxing career
Boxing record[2]
Total fights14
Wins12
Win by KO4
Losses1
Draws1
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Biography

Fawaz was born in Nigeria to a mother who was an immigrant from Benin and a father of Lebanese origin who didn't have Nigerian citizenship either.[citation needed] Fawaz says he had a difficult childhood. His mother abused him and his father took him away eventually leaving him with an "uncle", a relative or a family friend in Lagos. When Fawaz was 14, his "uncle" decided to take him to London, England "to reunite" him with his father. His mother had already been murdered in religious riots. Fawaz stayed in the UK starting age 14 on temporary permits without immigration papers ever since.[3] On arriving in London in 2002, Fawaz was put with a family who he says regularly abused him, trafficking him into "domestic servitude".[4] After escaping the foster family at age 15, the British social services public system put him in a group foster home in west London until he turned 16, then moving him to a halfway house for older teenagers. Eventually he was granted temporary leave until the age of 18 and has been illegally in the UK ever since.[3]

Fawaz began to train as an amateur boxer. He got his start in boxing through a sports day event at Brunel University in Uxbridge. After a few months, he moved to the All Stars gym, a long-running local club with a reputation for working with troubled young men. He married in 2011 but the marriage eventually broke down in 2014.[4] He has received a National diploma in Sports science. In early 2012, he won the Amateur Boxing Association (ABA) national championships, becoming light middleweight champion of England. He later held the London middleweight title. He acquired championship belts in three different weight classes.[4] He represented England internationally for six times including against Nigeria,[3][5] Germany, Sweden, Ireland. He was considered for Team GB for both the 2012 and 2016 Olympics, but was unable join in because he had no British passport.[4] In 2014, the English boxing manager and promoter Frank Warren offered Fawaz a professional contract.[4] But he was forced to turn the reported £200,000 down because of his immigration status forbidding him any legal income.[3] He is trained and managed by Aamir Ali the owner of Stonebridge Boxing Club in Harlesden, London Borough of Brent. Fawaz also helps youngsters in the gym training them in boxing.[4]

For more than a decade, the British authorities have tried to deport Fawaz. He applied and appealed for extended leave; he also applied for a spousal visa; and in one case asked to be registered as stateless person. All these requests were turned down by the Home Office, which considers his presence in the UK undesirable. In 2017, they attempted to deport him through a programme called Operation Nexus, a joint initiative between UK police forces and immigration enforcement.[3] He was arrested on the premises of Stonebridge Boxing Club where he was living for a while surviving on donations and sponsorship from the club. On 29 November 2017, he was arrested and put in Tinsley House immigration removal centre in Gatwick[4] for 5 weeks. Fawaz was released on bail on 2 January 2018 by an immigration tribunal appeals judge,[6] and after a public outcry and a petition demanding his release with 117,000 signatures collected.[3][7] The Labour MP for Hayes and Harlington John McDonnell and England Boxing both appealed to the authorities on the boxer's behalf.[citation needed] He has to sign-in weekly with the immigration authorities.[6]

Adopting the artistic name NaijaBoy, Bilal Fawaz has also released a number of recordings and music videos including "Did You See" in 2017 and "I'm Ready", "What More Do You Need" and "Body on Me" in 2018 as NaijaBoy. Under the alternative name State Lezz, he released a cover of "Mi Gente" in 2017, "Smoke and Juice", "You Know You Want It" and "What You Mean" in 2018 and "Wakanda", "My Layer" and "My Layer" in 2019.[8]

On 12 February 2022 Fawaz made his professional boxing debut at York Hall, London, scoring a technical knockout win in the third round.[citation needed] He became the Southern Area middleweight champion on 25 November, beating Gideon Onyenani by unanimous decision.[citation needed]

Fawaz would next face Junaid Bostan for the vacant BBBofC English Super Welterweight title at the Indigo at The O2 in London on 31 January 2025.[9] The fight resulted a split draw.[10] A rematch took place at Sheffield Arena on 11 October 2025, with Fawaz winning by majority decision to take the title.[11][12]

He challenged British and Commonwealth super-welterweight champion Ishmael Davis at Nottingham Arena on 21 February 2026.[13][14] Fawaz won by majority decision with two of the ringside judges seeing the fight 115–113 and 115–114 respectively in his favour, overulling the third who had it a 114–114 draw.[15][16]

On 2 May 2026, he successfully defended his titles against Ryan Kelly at University of Wolverhampton at The Halls in Wolverhampton when his opponent retired at the end of the ninth round.[17]

Professional boxing record

More information 14 fights, 12 wins ...
14 fights 12 wins 1 loss
By knockout 4 0
By decision 8 1
Draws 1
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More information No., Result ...
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
14 Win 12–1–1 Ryan Kelly RTD 9 (12), 3:00 2 May 2026 University of Wolverhampton at The Halls, Wolverhampton, England Retained British and Commonwealth super-welterweight titles
13 Win 11–1–1 Ishmael Davis MD 12 21 Feb 2026 Nottingham Arena, Nottingham, England Won British and Commonwealth super-welterweight titles
12 Win 10–1–1 Junaid Bostan MD 10 11 Oct 2025 Sheffield Arena, Sheffield, England Won vacant English super-welterweight title
11 Draw 9–1–1 Junaid Bostan SD 10 31 Jan 2025 Indigo at the O2, Greenwich, London, England For vacant English super-welterweight title
10 Win 9–1 Ryan Amos PTS 10 12 Oct 2024 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
9 Win 8–1 Adam Cieslak PTS 4 8 Jun 2024 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
8 Win 7–1 Jordan Grannum PTS 4 10 Feb 2024 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
7 Win 6–1 Gideon Onyenani PTS 10 25 Nov 2023 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England Won vacant British Southern Area middleweight Title
6 Win 5–1 Serge Ambomo PTS 6 9 Sep 2023 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
5 Loss 4–1 Ayoub Zakari PTS 4 25 Nov 2022 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
4 Win 4–0 Serge Ambomo PTS 4 1 Oct 2022 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
3 Win 3–0 Jean de Souza Freire TKO 3 (4), 1:50 3 Sep 2022 Tolworth Recreation Centre, London, England
2 Win 2–0 Malam Varela TKO 3 (4), 3:00 26 Feb 2022 SSE Hydro, Glasgow, Scotland
1 Win 1–0 Vladimir Fleischhauer TKO 3 (4), 1:41 11 Feb 2022 York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
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References

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