Igbo Girls .

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Author Topic: Igbo Girls .  (Read 2037 views)
ThoniaSlim (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #64 on: July 18, 2007, 06:55 PM »

i might be igbo also, but i don't follow stupidly and blindly and don't go about insulting other ladies from other tribes, i think its degrading oneself.  Cool
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #65 on: July 18, 2007, 07:01 PM »

Quote from: LILDICE$ on July 18, 2007, 06:52 PM
abuja,kano katsina,zamfara we all run it how the hell you in a hausa state and trina rep igbo is you crazy or something 2 gunz up r.i.p my gp mohamed tanko1.

Tuwo shinkafa should be eaten ,not smoked.
you are not making sense
stop inhaling! Grin
LILDICE$
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #66 on: July 18, 2007, 07:03 PM »

i love tuwo and chinkafa miyan kuuka,kin chikachi karouan banza.
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #67 on: July 18, 2007, 07:07 PM »

Quote from: ThoniaSlim on July 18, 2007, 06:55 PM
i might be igbo also, but i don't follow stupidly and blindly and don't go about insulting other ladies from other tribes, i think its degrading oneself. Cool

It's better not to follow at all.
be yourself.

OgidiBoy (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #68 on: July 18, 2007, 07:11 PM »

@ babayosisi


if you don't mind me asking, where is your best friend thiefofhearts, it's not like her not to show-up already. I hope she's ok oh Sad
Omo Eko (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #69 on: July 18, 2007, 07:17 PM »

Quote from: OgidiBoy on July 18, 2007, 07:11 PM
@ babayosisi


if you don't mind me asking, where is your best friend thiefofhearts, it's not like her not to show-up already. I hope she's ok oh Sad

LMAO, really? Grin Cheesy Cheesy

between, where is she? Angry Angry Angry Angry Angry Angry
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #70 on: July 18, 2007, 07:31 PM »

biko make una leave TOH alone.
someone once said it'll be interesting to have us two married to the same man.
I replied that she'll be castrating the man if he misbehaved and I'll be feeding him his roasted balls
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #71 on: July 18, 2007, 07:33 PM »

Quote from: LILDICE$ on July 18, 2007, 07:03 PM
i love tuwo and chinkafa miyan kuuka,kin chikachi karouan banza.

same to you and yours.
Islander (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #72 on: July 18, 2007, 07:41 PM »

Huummmmm,  wonders shall never end!!!
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #73 on: July 19, 2007, 02:31 AM »

Quote from: obowunmi on July 18, 2007, 08:54 PM
igbo girls?
win some
lose some,
you know wot i mean
egoooooooooooooo
yemi egoooo{give me money}

lol
it's nye m ego meaning kawo kudi in hausa.
money is a blessing and always appreciated.
May my barn fill up to overflowing,Amen.


* _42627031_naira8.jpg (73.46 KB, 416x300 )
LILDICE$
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #74 on: July 19, 2007, 01:58 PM »

babyosisi how the hell your igbo and you speak hausa?
babyosisi (f)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #75 on: July 19, 2007, 03:55 PM »

lildice$,I've asked you to address me like a lady
"how the hell" is no way to talk to a fine lady like me
LILDICE$
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #76 on: July 19, 2007, 03:57 PM »

how did you learn how to speak hausa?
segoye2 (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #77 on: July 19, 2007, 08:48 PM »

Igbo Girl are good girls and well behaved. I like really.
Expecailly when she' not ready to open office on your head  Grin
segoye2 (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #78 on: July 19, 2007, 08:53 PM »

@ Islander,

Quote
Huummmmm,  wonders shall never end!!!

This should be the King James version of Old old Francophone Englito!

Really, wonders shall never ,  (fill in the blank) Just joking with you my dear
segoye2 (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #79 on: July 20, 2007, 02:57 PM »

How are you Babyosisi?,  hope you are doing fine?   Cool
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #80 on: July 20, 2007, 06:15 PM »

Curtailing human trafficking in Ebonyi.
Curtailing human trafficking in Ebonyi

Esther Eze, suspected of human traffickingClement Oko-Nnachi writes on efforts being made by government and non-governmental organisations aimed at curbing the menace of human trafficking in the country, focusing on the recent clampdown of the Ebonyi State Police Command on human traffickers in the state.

Nigeria is a source, transit and destination country for women and children trafficked for the purposes of forced labour and commercial sexual exploitation. Within Nigeria, women and girls are primarily trafficked for domestic servitude, and boys for forced begging pr forced street hawking.

Transnationally, women, girls and boys are trafficked to Nigeria from other West and Central African countries and from Nigeria to neighbouring countries for the same purposes enunciated above. Besides, Nigerian women and girls are trafficked to North Africa, Saudi Arabia and other European countries like Italy, France, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Norway and many others. The question bugging the minds of many remains, is human trafficking on the increase in Nigeria? Who are the masterminds of human trafficking? Who are most at risk of being trafficked? What are the methods employed by traffickers to lure/recruit their victims? What inhuman and unjust conditions are victims subjected to? What impact has the creation of National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) made in efforts to combat these ugly development, as well as the National Assembly?

It is worthy to note that despite the effort being made by the Federal Government to stem the rising tide of human trafficking, the menace has not abated. In Ebonyi State, precisely on Thursday 12th July 2007, the newly appointed Commissioner of Police, Mrs. Julie N. Iroha, paraded before newsmen, a total of 121 suspects, including 12 women, in connection with human trafficking offences. According to the police boss, a team of detectives from the State Command, intercepted two luxurious buses belonging to one of the reknown transport companies in Nigeria, conveying the suspects from Lagos to Cameroon.

Upon interrogation, it was discovered that one Esther Eze (female) native of Uburu in Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State, was in charge of the 121 persons, from various African countries suspected to have been trafficked persons. The Commissioner of Police disclosed that of the number, 92 are from Mali, 14 from Senegal, one from Sierra, Leone, one from Guinea Bissau, two from Mauritania, seven from Guinea, three from Niger Republic and one from Cameroon. During interrogation, the human trafficker, Esther Eze admitted that she works with a transport company in Cameroon and was assisting the victims in securing employment in various companies in Cameroon. A non-governmental organisation known as Daughters of Virtue and Empowerment Initiative (DOVENET) with its Executive Director, Mrs. Ugo. Nnachi, had been at the forefront of the fight against human trafficking, child abuse and neglect. The NGO has traversed every nook and cranny of the state with the mobilisation and sensitisation of the rural dwellers to stop giving out their children to traffickers, advising them to adopt family planning methods aimed at birth control.

The International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) organised a seminar in 2003 for Italy, of foreign prostitutes in Italy being Nigerians. Some of the proposed remedies to the menace are multi-sectional. It was held that government should incorporate human rights and development perspectives into anti-corruption work.
It should also enact a comprehensive law that will cover most aspects of human trafficking, specify severe punishment for traffickers, rehabilitate victims and give law enforcement officers adequate investigative tools. By improving on security at border posts and adequately equipping law enforcement agencies to check the schemes of the traffickers, the problem of human trafficking would be drastically minimised.

There should also be capacity building at all levels for the eradication of human trafficking. Public enlightenment through regular workshops, seminars, conferences and through print and electronic media. Schools, religious bodies, traditional institutions and the family should be sensitised on the evils of this abominable trade. Importantly,education and employment for the teeming youths is necessary to achieve the objective of curbing human trafficking. It is also necessary to discouraging excessive materialism and the culture of ‘get rich quick’, just as ensuring proper coordination of efforts between the police and other state security services must be made a priority. The United Nations Convention against organised crime signed by 80 countries and the European Union (EU) in December 2000, defined trafficking as a modern form of slavery and servitude.

The masterminds of human trafficking are individual criminals and organised criminal groups often involving relatives or other persons already known to the victims. Exploiting the poverty and low status of women in the developing world, middlemen are able to bring together the supply and demand for cheap labour. Globalisation has not only stimulated the movement of capital, goods and technology but also the movement of all categories of people from one end of the world to the other. Contemporary human trafficking is an organised business just as the transatlantic slave trade was with various linkages spread around the globe. Today, not only children and women are trafficked, young boys fall prey. Hand in hand with this, came the commercialisation of humanity which is akin to modern day slavery.

To curb this menace of human trafficking requires prevention through education, increasing public awareness about economic alternatives, protection for victims of trafficking and prosecution of traffickers, as well as fostering close cooperation between government and the NGOs to enhance public education and awareness programmes targeted at the vulnerable groups. The effects of human trafficking, especially on the victims are better told than experienced. Investigation has shown that for the traffickers, the profits are too high and the penalties too low to resist the trade.
romeo (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #81 on: July 20, 2007, 06:20 PM »

thank you chichi for this thread and for those that don't like it and for those that said that they don't tolerate whatever!! you all can jump off the bridge and die. toniafat or toniaslim get the hell out of here, igbo blood my ass, hissesssssssssssss too

umuigbo Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

@mohadana or okoroamadi

are you crazy pasting all this shit here?
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #82 on: July 20, 2007, 06:23 PM »

 ;d ;d
OgidiBoy (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #83 on: July 20, 2007, 10:54 PM »

Quote from: romeo on July 20, 2007, 06:20 PM
thank you chichi for this thread and for those that don't like it and for those that said that they don't tolerate whatever!! you all can jump off the bridge and die. toniafat or toniaslim get the hell out of here, igbo blood my ass, hissesssssssssssss too

umuigbo Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

@mohadana or okoroamadi

are you crazy pasting all this shit here?

Don't mind them, see as jealousy is Turing them green. Cry
grafikdon
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #84 on: July 21, 2007, 03:20 AM »

This goes to prove the proverb ''Ngwere ni'le mmakpu mmakpu, ejighi ya mara nke afo n'asa''. I guess people are flaring up because of Chichi's past ethnic tirades and will continue to do that even when she posts anything that isn't degrading other ethnic groups. Honestly, if we are not looking beyond this thread, all the name calling is totally uncalled for. Everything she typed there is applicable to every ethnic group in this country, she didn't type ''Igbo girls rule! The rest drool!''. Think about it.  Wink
kojeiwa (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #85 on: July 21, 2007, 03:39 AM »


Abeg make una let person hear word, Igbo girls this, Igbo girls that. I am still yet to find any pretty Igbo girl. Igbos that use their daughter for Investment.

If I can buy an Igbo girl for such a big amount of money, why won't she cook good meal for me or treat me well, She wan die or else i will return her to her

parents for my money to be refunded.
abiodunade (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #86 on: July 21, 2007, 09:51 AM »

some igbo girls are too masculine for my liking
they have bodies like those of men.
abiodunade (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #87 on: July 21, 2007, 09:54 AM »

Quote from: okoroamadi on July 20, 2007, 06:15 PM
Curtailing human trafficking in Ebonyi.
Curtailing human trafficking in Ebonyi

Esther Eze, suspected of human traffickingClement Oko-Nnachi writes on efforts being made by government and non-governmental organisations aimed at curbing the menace of human trafficking in the country, focusing on the recent clampdown of the Ebonyi State Police Command on human traffickers in the state.

Nigeria is a source, transit and destination country for women and children trafficked for the purposes of forced labour and commercial sexual exploitation. Within Nigeria, women and girls are primarily trafficked for domestic servitude, and boys for forced begging pr forced street hawking.

Transnationally, women, girls and boys are trafficked to Nigeria from other West and Central African countries and from Nigeria to neighbouring countries for the same purposes enunciated above. Besides, Nigerian women and girls are trafficked to North Africa, Saudi Arabia and other European countries like Italy, France, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Norway and many others. The question bugging the minds of many remains, is human trafficking on the increase in Nigeria? Who are the masterminds of human trafficking? Who are most at risk of being trafficked? What are the methods employed by traffickers to lure/recruit their victims? What inhuman and unjust conditions are victims subjected to? What impact has the creation of National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) made in efforts to combat these ugly development, as well as the National Assembly?

It is worthy to note that despite the effort being made by the Federal Government to stem the rising tide of human trafficking, the menace has not abated. In Ebonyi State, precisely on Thursday 12th July 2007, the newly appointed Commissioner of Police, Mrs. Julie N. Iroha, paraded before newsmen, a total of 121 suspects, including 12 women, in connection with human trafficking offences. According to the police boss, a team of detectives from the State Command, intercepted two luxurious buses belonging to one of the reknown transport companies in Nigeria, conveying the suspects from Lagos to Cameroon.

Upon interrogation, it was discovered that one Esther Eze (female) native of Uburu in Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State, was in charge of the 121 persons, from various African countries suspected to have been trafficked persons. The Commissioner of Police disclosed that of the number, 92 are from Mali, 14 from Senegal, one from Sierra, Leone, one from Guinea Bissau, two from Mauritania, seven from Guinea, three from Niger Republic and one from Cameroon. During interrogation, the human trafficker, Esther Eze admitted that she works with a transport company in Cameroon and was assisting the victims in securing employment in various companies in Cameroon. A non-governmental organisation known as Daughters of Virtue and Empowerment Initiative (DOVENET) with its Executive Director, Mrs. Ugo. Nnachi, had been at the forefront of the fight against human trafficking, child abuse and neglect. The NGO has traversed every nook and cranny of the state with the mobilisation and sensitisation of the rural dwellers to stop giving out their children to traffickers, advising them to adopt family planning methods aimed at birth control.

The International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) organised a seminar in 2003 for Italy, of foreign prostitutes in Italy being Nigerians. Some of the proposed remedies to the menace are multi-sectional. It was held that government should incorporate human rights and development perspectives into anti-corruption work.
It should also enact a comprehensive law that will cover most aspects of human trafficking, specify severe punishment for traffickers, rehabilitate victims and give law enforcement officers adequate investigative tools. By improving on security at border posts and adequately equipping law enforcement agencies to check the schemes of the traffickers, the problem of human trafficking would be drastically minimised.

There should also be capacity building at all levels for the eradication of human trafficking. Public enlightenment through regular workshops, seminars, conferences and through print and electronic media. Schools, religious bodies, traditional institutions and the family should be sensitised on the evils of this abominable trade. Importantly,education and employment for the teeming youths is necessary to achieve the objective of curbing human trafficking. It is also necessary to discouraging excessive materialism and the culture of ‘get rich quick’, just as ensuring proper coordination of efforts between the police and other state security services must be made a priority. The United Nations Convention against organised crime signed by 80 countries and the European Union (EU) in December 2000, defined trafficking as a modern form of slavery and servitude.

The masterminds of human trafficking are individual criminals and organised criminal groups often involving relatives or other persons already known to the victims. Exploiting the poverty and low status of women in the developing world, middlemen are able to bring together the supply and demand for cheap labour. Globalisation has not only stimulated the movement of capital, goods and technology but also the movement of all categories of people from one end of the world to the other. Contemporary human trafficking is an organised business just as the transatlantic slave trade was with various linkages spread around the globe. Today, not only children and women are trafficked, young boys fall prey. Hand in hand with this, came the commercialisation of humanity which is akin to modern day slavery.

To curb this menace of human trafficking requires prevention through education, increasing public awareness about economic alternatives, protection for victims of trafficking and prosecution of traffickers, as well as fostering close cooperation between government and the NGOs to enhance public education and awareness programmes targeted at the vulnerable groups. The effects of human trafficking, especially on the victims are better told than experienced. Investigation has shown that for the traffickers, the profits are too high and the penalties too low to resist the trade.
this is off point
and it has nothn to do with this thread
yam head
grafikdon
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #88 on: July 21, 2007, 10:51 AM »

Na real wa for WAEC o. If you talk trash about other ethnic groups, na fire. I f you praise your own ethnic group, na die! If you keep your trap shut, na hell! I weak o.
Siena
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #89 on: July 21, 2007, 02:01 PM »

Despite Chichi's threads, I must say, I know a lot of pretty Igbo girls. But, it's not to say girls from other tribes are not just as pretty.
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #90 on: July 21, 2007, 06:00 PM »

few of them are pretty,why majority of them are hairy and muscular with a bleach face and  monkey nose.
toshmann (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #91 on: July 21, 2007, 07:45 PM »

ibo girls are great. they are beautiful, intelligent, disciplined and sound. i know their faults but it is not promiscuity. i know where their fault is Grin 
i have dated ibo girls and i have dated efik girls, ibibio girls, kogi babes, rives and bayelsa girls. i have also dated edo babe before. i have also had some stuff with a yoruba girl. i know their good and bad sides. efik girls are most loving and caring, ibibio girls are best in bed, rivers girls are best in clubbing, yoruba girls are best in respecting the man (they'll make me think i'm a governor Cheesy) they are very humble. ibo girls are best in problem solving. edo girls are best to play and have fun with. this is not a perfect description but from my experience when i was a young man( i miss my youth Cheesy)

among all these babes, there are bad habits for each of them but i wont be direct, i'll let you work that out. . . .a group is dirty, another lazy, another money money money everyday, another will sleep with 100 men at a time Grin , a group can kill you and go away. make una add 1+1 to get 2 and know which group get which bad habit. i no go talk Grin
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #92 on: July 21, 2007, 07:54 PM »

money money =Ibo girl
the group that is dirty=Yoruba babe
sleep 100 men=calabar babe
.the rest i will try to figure it out.
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #93 on: July 21, 2007, 07:58 PM »

youself na ashewo man.
toshmann (m)
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #94 on: July 21, 2007, 08:00 PM »

hmmmn, somebody is trying Grin  
people no be me talk am ooooooo Grin

Quote from: okoroamadi on July 21, 2007, 07:58 PM
youself na ashewo man.
guy na wa for you o. na because i come talk true for here. if we check am now, na you worse pass me. at least i don stop. you nko Cool
okoroamadi
Re: Igbo Girls .
« #95 on: July 21, 2007, 08:01 PM »

na you talk.oooooooo
 Fine Igbo Guys Should Come Out Of Hiding! I'm Searching High And Low: !  Kalabari People!  Nigerian Marriages  Page 2
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