Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,825 members, 7,813,722 topics. Date: Tuesday, 30 April 2024 at 04:59 PM

El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die (62584 Views)

Dogara Dares El-Rufai To Publish Security Votes / Buhari Asked El-Rufai To Write Leaked Memo At Daura Meeting - Omojuwa, Authority / El-Rufai To Demolish 40 Churches, 3500 Houses, 16 Schools (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) ... (12) (Reply) (Go Down)

El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by americanigga(m): 3:43am On Apr 03, 2016
Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, in an interview with select journalists including GODWIN ISENYO, speaks on the proposed religious preaching bill, face-off with trade unions, among others

How has it been since you assumed office?

I want to say it has been an interesting and successful journey and we are grateful to the Almighty God for His intervention in the state which led to our election. I know we got elected because the majority of the people of the state wanted a change as the way things were going was not acceptable to them and that was why they all came out to vote for us. We are very grateful.

I never expected that running a state would be very different from being a federal minister. I thought that running a state would be the same as running the Federal Capital Territory but I was wrong on that. I have seen that things are quite different and more complex.

One of the challenges we are facing in this state is that everything seems to be politicised or “ethnicised” or “religionised”. A very simple problem that can be discussed and resolved by logic and facts becomes converted into issues of ethnicity and religion and so on. Thus, these are some of the challenges we have to face but we are doing the best we can.

As far as governance is concerned, we have addressed frankly what we felt were the issues; first low revenues. In the first month we got here, we got about N5bn from Federal Allocation but in the last two months, we got N2.8bn each. Thus, even from the time we started to now, there have been massive changes, but we are taking steps. We knew that all things are scanty and we need to do some things. That is why, from day one, the deputy governor and I have decided to give 50 per cent of our salaries as our contribution because we are going to ask public servants to make similar sacrifice.

We also reduced the size of government; the number of commissioners has been reduced from 24 to 13. It was all in an effort to cut cost. We inherited 38 Permanent Secretaries, but now we are operating with about 18 of them. We are looking at Ministries, Departments and Agencies that have similar functions and merging them just to cut cost. This is because if your revenues are collapsing, you need to cut your cost. We are reducing the length of convoys; the governor’s convoy had 21 vehicles, but now, we only have five or six cars that go out with me and they are all essential. I don’t go out with the ambulance because I don’t expect to drop dead anytime. This is all in the bid to reduce the cost of running the government.

In some states, the battle of salary alone has incapacitated the government. But in this state, we pay salaries. Yes, there are issues, but on the whole, we have done pretty well.

Education is an area we want to revive. We inherited 4,225 primary schools in Kaduna state. We were told that 1.2 million pupils were sitting on the floor; we saw that virtually all the 4,225 primary schools had no windows, doors and seats in their classrooms. No toilets and roof. We found out that pupils had to go to the bush when they were pressed, girls could not come to school when they were menstruating because there was no water. We had to take school as a priority and we started working by renovating them. In some classrooms, we had 200 pupils for classrooms that were built to accommodate 40 pupils. We can’t do anything immediately because we can’t build classrooms overnight but we are serious about correcting it. We need to make our children like going to school and that is more important than anything. And we said one of the things that this administration wants to do is to eliminate the almajiri system in Kaduna State.

What measures are you employing?


The first thing is to ensure that there is an incentive for children to go to school and that is the logic behind the school feeding programme. We want children to go to school and look forward to something. Secondly, the first 100 months of a child’s development is when his brain develops, when he has adequate nutrition. So, there is also the nutritional aspect to it. Thirdly, we decided that we wanted to take the burden of giving the children pocket money every day off the parents. We could not start it immediately because we had to do a lot of planning to minimise the problems. Then, we said we would fix the existing classrooms as they were those were the doors, windows, roofs and what have you.

Another thing we want to do is to improve teachers’ quality. We got a report that 38-42 per cent of our teachers are not qualified to teach and we can’t throw them out overnight. We want to give them a period to train and upgrade their skills but we intend to have good teachers in our primary and secondary schools.

We are making progress on all fronts. In our boarding secondary schools, we have enhanced money for their feeding so that they can get better quality food and we conducted an experiment of taking out the feeding from the hands of the principals and contracting it out to restaurants and caterers. This is because when you give the principal the money, you are making the principal a cook. He has to go and organise food from the market and that is not his job. Using Queen Amina College as an example of where we have started, the students are so happy because the quality of food has improved. We are spending N180 per day on each student. We are even looking at improving that if our finances increase.

We are taking steps to block loopholes in salary payment by requesting every employee of the state to open an account with a Deposit Money Bank so that they can have a Bank Verification Number. You cannot cheat on the BVN and that is the final thing that we are doing and I am very grateful to the public servants of Kaduna State for their patience because they have gone through this over and over again. After all this verification and the real staff have been separated from the ghost workers, the people in account and personnel will remove the real staff and put back the ghost workers again just to cause confusion. It is a continuous battle because those that created these ghost workers are beneficiaries of huge amounts of money every month.

Why the persistence on the issue of salaries?

We have had issues with payment of salaries not because we don’t have the money like other states, but because of arrangement issues. People in the system have been sabotaging our efforts. I don’t want to go into details but we have set strategies to deal with that. Another area we have a big problem with, is the local government payroll. Their records are much worse. We sorted out the state’s much earlier because those people that complained that they had not been paid salaries were mostly teachers and local government employees.

We are focusing now on the local government. We are doing a census of teachers so that we can know for sure who our teachers are. We are deploying technology to know if the teachers come to school or not. By God’s grace, before the end of the year, many of these issues will be sorted out and things will begin to work better. One thing that we know for sure is that we need to employ more teachers.


How do issues get political and ethnic colouration in your state?


This is something I find both disturbing and disappointing. In any argument and situation, if you have your facts and you are right, you don’t need to refer to religion. Religion doesn’t win arguments for you. What I have found in life is that the moment a person introduces religion in any situation, I know they are wrong because if you are right, have facts and can justify your position, why bring God into it? God will judge us on the day of judgment. People only revert to religion and ethnicity when they have run out of convincing arguments. What I find in Kaduna State is that people can bring religion into everything. I think more than any state in Nigeria, Kaduna state has suffered more in terms of religious and ethnic divisions and that should be a lesson for us but what I found out is that the elite have one weapon and that is religion and it is sad. But, unfortunately for them they have not studied me. If anyone has studied my career at the FCT, they would know that playing the religious card with me will fail all the time, because the moment you play that card, I know you are an adversary that needs to be put down and I will not look back until I am done with you.

One of your policies that has generated a lot of controversy is the religious preaching bill. What does the government want to achieve when it becomes law and how are you going to tackle the anxiety that it has generated among the people?

Kaduna State, more than any state in Nigeria, if you take out the Yobe, Borno and Adamawa axis, which suffered from Boko Haram insurgency, has suffered the most from death and destruction of property due to misuse and abuse of religion. More people have been killed in Kaduna from the words that people have said. And if you go back in history to when the Maitasine incident happened; he was a Cameroonian that came to Nigeria and started preaching. The Emir of Kano had him deported back to Cameroon. After that, he managed to smuggle himself back again and continued preaching. He was preaching a version of Islam that was intolerant, a version that called other Muslims pagans and so on. But in spite of what he was preaching, he acquired followers and we all know what happened. Military operation had to be mounted to flush them out. Those that escaped from the Maitasine crisis moved to Borno State and started the Kalakato sect, which again led to many deaths and destruction in the early 1990s. All these came from people that were not trained in religious matters, people that woke up and started preaching and acquiring followers and inevitably their sects grew in large numbers to threaten communities and there were clashes.

That was also how Muhammed Yusuf started. He was a student of Sheik Jaafar Adam in Kano. They fell out because Jaafar felt that some of the views he was expressing were extreme and intolerant. He went and started his own sect and we all know what happened and we are still dealing with it.

Thus, when you have such things happening in your country, I think as leaders, we have to sit down and examine ourselves and the society and see what we can do to prevent it.

In my opinion, it is the lack of regulation of religion that led to all these circles of death and destruction. Just recently, we had the Shi’ite problem in Zaria, following a similar pattern.

I believe that before you start preaching in any religion, you should have gone through a system of education, training and some kind of certification. Even those that deal with the physical life get certified, let alone those that deal with the spiritual life. We initiated this bill from the Kaduna State Security Council, based on reports of new sects emerging in Kaduna State.

Are there recent cases?



There is one around Makarfi called Gausiyya, they do their Zuhr prayer around 11am, different from other Muslims. This is how this thing starts and if you don’t resolve it quickly, it grows into something else.

A woman in Makarfi said Prophet Muhammad (SAW) was speaking to her and sick people started going to her for their healing. The husband of this woman was busy collecting N1,000 as consultancy fee before people could see his wife. We had to take steps to end that movement because before you know it, people would start coming from far and wide and this woman would become our next problem.

It was the report of two or three of these that compelled us in the security council to ask the question, whether or not there was a law that regulates preaching. Then we were told there was a law; since 1984 after the Maitasine problems, the administration passed the law. It was subsequently amended several times to increase the fine and the imprisonment term. This is a living problem and we know it. Christian priests, the ones I know, go to seminary and spend so many years there, study under a more experienced Reverend to learn what to say and what not to say.

Religious leaders don’t preach hatred; they preach peace, tolerance and love. But today in my religion of Islam, anybody can wake up and start a sect; there is no control. In those days, from Islamiyya School, if you chose that line, you needed to study more books. After that, you would go to the East (Borno area) for more studies and training. Then from there, you would go to a mosque and begin to call people to prayer before you become an imam in any mosque. Before you became an imam of a Friday mosque, the community must agree that you were well learned and competent. But now, everyone can build a mosque, put up loudspeakers, call himself an imam and start disturbing people at night.

A priest that has gone through thorough teachings and training would not go and ask people to cause trouble and kill each other. They are trained men of God. In Christendom today, we all know that some people would drink something overnight and wake up the next day and claim they are apostles, that God had spoken to them. You could not disproof that because you were not there with him and he would start to collect followers. When he begins to preach hatred, what can you do? Is it the society we want? This is the question. The logic behind this law is to strengthen the 1984 laws so as to regulate and ensure that those that are given the opportunity to preach at least know what they are doing, they have a level of responsibility to develop the society rather than divide it. This is our goal; we don’t have anything against any religion or anybody.

What about freedom of religion?


What about freedom of religion?

Some people have argued that there is freedom of religion, of course; Section 38 is very clear: We must not have a state religion, every Nigerian is allowed to practise their faith or even if they do not have any religion at all. However, those that are quoting Section 38 of the constitution conveniently forget Section 45 which says that you can regulate any human right if it would affect the right of others. You can practise your religion but you can’t do it in a way that abuses the right of another. There is nothing in this law that is not in conformity with the constitution, or there is nothing new about it other than expanding the scope and after we sent the bill to the House of Assembly, I saw an article that alerted us of what we did not include: Blocking of federal highways, but that is in the Penal Code. It is good to have put it there because every Friday you see most mosques blocking roads. Why? We had to call them to a meeting to have a system that police would be there to guard and also control the traffic. In my opinion, this is a law that we need not only in Kaduna State but almost all states in Nigeria and I want to assure you that, I just came back from the National Economic Council meeting, and a handful of the governors asked me to send them our own law because they thought they also needed it in their state. Everybody is watching to see how we will handle our own. We sent it to the state assembly in October 2015 because some people are saying we sent it because of the Shi’ite problem. No! It was the state assembly that kept on looking at it and saying this one ‘na hot potato’ until now. But, on a very serious note, we don’t have any ulterior motive other than to put a framework that would ensure that Kaduna State people live in peace with everyone practising their religion and disallowing every Tom, Dick and Harry to come and say he can preach.

What will be the major role of the government in this?

We do not regulate as such, we have formed two committees that would issue the licence. It is not the government that will issue the licence. It is a committee of Christian umbrella bodies and Muslim umbrella bodies. We will just have an inter-ministerial committee to be checking once in a while and be keeping records because we want to know who is preaching here and who is doing what there. For us, the reaction was just disproportionate and many of the people that are talking about the law have never even read it. If you read that law, it is very short; it is 16 sections. I tell people who disagree with the bill to read it and tell me what they don’t like about it. Don’t tell me you don’t like the entire law because we know we have a problem and I am the governor and I need a solution. Don’t say the solution is not to have the law; we need the law but tell me what you don’t like, then we can discuss it. We want to find a solution that brings peace. We are not fixed in our position, what we are fixed about is that Kaduna State people must live in peace and everyone must be allowed to practise their religion without hindrance. We took an oath of office to do that. Apart from that, every other thing can be discussed. Are you telling me it is okay for someone to put up speakers in the night and start making a noise, be it Islam or Christianity, disturbing people? Is that okay? Which chapter in the two holy books says that Jesus or Muhammad (SAW) did that. Are we not trying to copy them? Are they not the perfections of both our religions? Jesus said, ‘Give to God what is God’s and to Caesar what is Caesar’s.’ Government is the Caesar.

We have informed the Christian Association of Nigeria and the Jama’atu Nasril Islam that if they have problems with any section, if there is anything to be done, and if they don’t want the government to be involved, we will remove it, but they must regulate.



What is your take on the assumption by some in the state that hold that the bill is aimed at stopping the practice of Christianity and Islam in the state?

I have not seen anyone talking about Islam actually. Most of the people that say I would die, as if I would not die, are people who call themselves Christian clergy. Of course, I will die. If that apostle is truly an apostle, he should mention the day I will die. There is nothing in that law that prevents or infringes the practice of religion. It seeks to ensure that those that preach religion are qualified, trained and certified by their peers to do it. And some sections of the media have made it as if the law was drafted against Christianity. It is most irresponsible and I have nothing to say except to leave the matter to God.

http://www.punchng.com/the-apostle-that-said-i-will-die-should-mention-the-date-el-rufai/

88 Likes 15 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by americanigga(m): 3:52am On Apr 03, 2016
Fellow Nigerians this is a serious issue. Everybody will die including apostle suleiman, so why is he (suleiman ) talking as if he will not die? I think he should apologize to El-Rufai immediately.

If u ask me it is because of preachers like Apostle Johnson Suleiman that we need this kind of bill(law).

379 Likes 31 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by odiereke(m): 3:59am On Apr 03, 2016
We should just be careful with what comes out of our mouth. because like a Proverb in my language 'Eyin loro, toba ti fo, kose ko mo' Words is like a Egg, once broken it can never be whole again.

37 Likes 4 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by slyzy(m): 4:02am On Apr 03, 2016
Left to me , since the bill does not single out a particular religion for oppression, all the hues and cries it has so far generated are needless.

I understand that most people criticising this bill do so purely out of sentiment without recourse to investigate the underlying relevance of same objectively. Shalom!

207 Likes 18 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by makingsense(m): 4:03am On Apr 03, 2016
Hell Rufia


Well in another news

29 Likes 2 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by dustmalik: 4:17am On Apr 03, 2016
People like Suleman haven't even seen the bill itself, yet he has already pronounced death upon El-rufai. What kind of a man of God does that? This same man wrongly predicted GEJ to win Buhari.

201 Likes 10 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by eazysally: 4:40am On Apr 03, 2016
The bill have been their since 1984 and he knows kaduna is religiously volatile while is he revisiting an issue that is already enacted when he suppose to be acting on it, he should have let sleeping dogs lie. the initial public outcry on the bill emanated from his state else u and I who reside outside the state including prophet suleman wouldn't have bother. This shows it has an under tune agender targeted at a particular religion.

11 Likes 4 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by cynosure489: 4:43am On Apr 03, 2016
El rufai should know that It is not christian to pray death on perceived enemies no matter what. Suleiman and his congregation are on thier own.

57 Likes 6 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by blackpanda: 4:50am On Apr 03, 2016
An apostle that calls someone a fool on the pulpit? Sulaiman is the one that will die. I only blame the people being deceived by him

63 Likes 6 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Tex42(m): 4:50am On Apr 03, 2016
El rufai and apostle Sulaiman should tread carefully, Kaduna state is very volatile and precarious when it comes to religious matters. We don't want any religious crisis, blood shed in Kaduna state.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by kilokeys(m): 4:51am On Apr 03, 2016
Prophets of doom..


They no dey see better thing.

Make e answer El rufai..

28 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by ziccoit: 5:06am On Apr 03, 2016
A clergy man should know better. What happened here is what my people would call "an old age doesn't always translate to wisdom", that's for Apostle Suleiman. In some Islamic countries such as Sauidi Arabia, you can not just wake up one day from wrong side of your bed and start passing opinion about an Islamic law and rule. There is a laid down procedure whereby every knotty knots are subjected to processing and tests according to what Hadith and Quran say before it's pushed out for public consumption. That's why there is harmony in those countries. That's an Islamic country! I assume similar thing is obtainable in Rome too.

That kaduna bill should be replicated in all states of federation. Enough of hate speech from supposed MOG and Imams. Call people to your side with wisdom not by passing aspersions to other people's faiths.

140 Likes 10 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Soskid(m): 5:26am On Apr 03, 2016
I will like the self-a claimed minute of God to take up the challenge. End time Pastors

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Nobody: 5:43am On Apr 03, 2016
is it when blood starts to drip from the blade slicing through your neck that you realize the truth. NIGERIANS!! SMH

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by kenedy175(m): 5:46am On Apr 03, 2016
We all shall die someday. You could even die where you stand.

3 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Babacele: 5:59am On Apr 03, 2016
God bless El-rufai. Those who are deep would realise that Religious sects like d Shiites group would have bn taken care of wen this bill is passed. it has nothing to do with Christianity except those practising fake believes.

70 Likes 3 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Chubhie: 6:01am On Apr 03, 2016
If the apostle worships a living God, he should be able to put a date to el rufia death.

20 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by adenine02: 6:15am On Apr 03, 2016
bill like dt r ment to ban pple like dt

apostle sule

T.B

chris........ u can add urs


shekau and any other bokoharamite mallams


and dt man dt av d key to hell, wat dt is name ooo!



Bishop em ... bishop emmm somtin...


shalom

13 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by otokx(m): 6:25am On Apr 03, 2016
God does not delight in the death of any man but that all men should come to the knowledge of truth.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by omenka(m): 6:26am On Apr 03, 2016
americanigga:
Fellow Nigerians this is a serious issue. Everybody will die including apostle suleiman, so why is he (suleiman ) talking as if he will not die? I think he should apologize to El-Rufai immediately.

If u ask me it is because of preachers like Apostle Johnson Suleiman that we need this kind of bill(law).
Absolutely. I was so irritated when I watched the video; dude was just shouting and acting like a thug- was just wondering what kind of people worship in that church.

This is why I'd always love my pastor and wish every other man of God is like him. He never ceases to emphasise salvation, love and charity.

If the man says el-Rufai would die, it is indeed a good question to ask "when" because everyone would die someday.

51 Likes 3 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by omenka(m): 6:28am On Apr 03, 2016
dustmalik:
People like Suleman haven't even seen the bill itself, yet he has already pronounced death upon El-rufai. What kind of a man of God does that? This same man wrongly predicted GEJ to win Buhari.
He might even die before El-Rufai. We've seen it happen in the past.

34 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by tonybosses: 6:30am On Apr 03, 2016
It's not bravery to come on a faceless forum and insult men of God, apply wisdom.... if you think God is joking watch and see.

4 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by orisa37: 6:33am On Apr 03, 2016
God(Allah, His Nickname in Arabic), doesn't give dates. He simply grabs you and throws you overboard unaware before the gnashing and tearing of your funny teeth. I'm praying for you that you don't disappear so soon.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by LordIsaac(m): 6:46am On Apr 03, 2016
God bless Governor El-Rufai of Kaduna State. Grant him wisdom to direct the affairs of that state according to your will. In Jesus name I pray, amen.

41 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by fexti: 6:47am On Apr 03, 2016
Hahahaha, I just dey laugh
Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by seunmsg(m): 6:55am On Apr 03, 2016
tonybosses:
It's not bravery to come on a faceless forum and insult men of God, apply wisdom.... if you think God is joking watch and see.

It's also not bravery for a so called man of God to wish death on another person. If Suleiman want us to take his prophecy about El-Rufai seriously, he should tell us the exact date that he will die or else, we will continue to call him out as a fake and fraudulent pastor.

55 Likes 2 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Okanokan(m): 7:00am On Apr 03, 2016
El-Rufai and his supporters should be extremely careful rather than throwing barbs over the net. The word of God is clear "He comfirmeth the word of His servant and performeth the counsel of His messenger". El-Rufai and his friend should read and comprehend the story of Pharoah.

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by mikki123(m): 7:02am On Apr 03, 2016
El-Rufai is a stupid man, very senseless

3 Likes 5 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Nobody: 7:06am On Apr 03, 2016
Nasir El-Midget El-Rusau El-Rufai.
Nice one there. Let the Murthaz reply yhu back with the doom date

2 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by Chubhie: 7:15am On Apr 03, 2016
seunmsg:


It's also not bravery for a so called man of God to wish death on another person. If Suleiman want us to take his prophecy about El-Rufai seriously, he should tell us the exact date that he will die or else, we will continue to call him out as a fake and fraudulent pastor.
it's as simple as that. if the exact date is impossible, he should as well give a time frame.

4 Likes

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by isbish(m): 7:20am On Apr 03, 2016
How is El-Rufai senseless please? Kindly explaIn pls.

mikki123:
El-Rufai is a stupid man, very senseless

26 Likes 2 Shares

Re: El-rufai To Suleiman: Mention The Day I Will Die by wins18(m): 7:39am On Apr 03, 2016
I have more money to make, so this shouldn't distract me, check my signature to follow suit and say bye bye to being broke

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) ... (12) (Reply)

Soldiers Who Shot Protesters Must Face The Law, US Officials Tell Osinbajo / Nnamdi Kanu's Bail Conditions: Jewish Surety, N300m, No Interviews, Crowd Of 10 / Governor Fayose And His Entourage Eating At Iya Kareem's Bukar (pic)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 77
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.