Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,152,095 members, 7,814,853 topics. Date: Wednesday, 01 May 2024 at 08:55 PM

As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan (842 Views)

IMF Ranks Nigeria Second Worst In The World In Use Of Sovereign Wealth Fund / As 20m now face devastation. UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan / As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan.. (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by jumpandpas(m): 4:41am On Nov 25, 2017
… Counts real cost of a fratricidal Boko Haram war

By Soni Daniel with UN report

Eight years after Boko Haram launched a senseless war that has claimed over 20,000 lives and displaced over 1.8 million people now scattered in IDP camps across North Eastern Nigeria, the real cost of the fratricidal war now beckons: 8.5 million people are in urgent need of life-saving assistance, 5.2 million are in dire need of food security interventions and 3.4 in urgent need of nutrition assistance. But the fund for all of this is not readily available, putting the fate of the victims in the balance and their future in uncertainty.


Halima, three, is sitting on the bare floor close to her 21-year-old mother, Sadiatu, and they are actively muttering some words to each other. The time is about 2pm on a Tuesday and they have not yet had their breakfast due to the fact that there is no food in their new abode and the money to do so, is not available.
Boko Haram

Their abode, known as Bakassi IDP Camp, in Maiduguri the Borno State Capital, is holding them and thousands of other persons violently displaced from their ancestral homes and communities in many parts of the state and thrown into despondency, fear and distress by the Boko Haram terrorists, who have since 2009 been killing, maiming and kidnapping people in pursuit of an agenda: the declaration of a Caliphate where western education would be outlawed.


As a reporter gets close to Sadiatu and her daughter to figure out the reason for their pensive mood, the mother offered a clue: “We don’t have anything in this house and we don’t know where our next meal will come from,” Sadiatu lamented.
As she narrates her jeremiad to a team of reporters, other occupants of the make-shift camp- a housing estate planned by the Borno State Government but hurriedly converted to a holding camp for the displaced victims, many other IPDs gather around to describe their pitiable situations.


Adamu Shehu, 12, an orphan, is moving from one hut in the camp to the other in search of any form of provision, having lost her two parents to the Boko Haram terrorists when they struck Gwoza over three years ago. Beyond the violent killing of his parents, Adamu said their home was razed by the insurgents and other members of the family killed, wounded or taken away to unknown destination.

Sadiatu, Halima and Adamu are just a few of the thousands of IDPs squatting at the Bakassi Camp provided by the Borno State Government and receiving material and logistical support from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, UNOCHA. No fewer than five of such camps have been provided by the Borno State Government to provide temporary accommodation for the IDPs and protect them from further exploitation by their tormentors.
The three are among the 1.8 million victims of the Boko Haram insurgency, which has claimed no fewer than 20,000 lives and destroyed many hitherto flourishing communities and displaced their inhabitants across the six north east states of Nigeria, sparking one of the world’s worst refugee scenarios.


According to OCHA, the humanitarian crisis in Nigeria’s Northeast and the Lake Chad region is one of the most severe in the world today with 8.5 million in need of humanitarian assistance in 2017 in the worst affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe with the war now in its eighth year, showing no signs of abating.
Beyond the 8.5 people in need of humanitarian assistance, no fewer than 1.7 million according to OCHA, are internally displaced in the three states, with 80 percent of them in Borno State alone, the epic centre of the crisis and over half of them living outside IDP camps in local communities, who are themselves said to be among the world’s poorest people.

Aside that, 6.1 million people in the area are in need of protection while no fewer than 4000 women and girls are reported to have been abducted since 2009 by the insurgents.
UNOCHA in its latest update on the crisis entitled, Northeast: Humanitarian Review, noted, “Civilians continue to bear the brunt of a conflict that has resulted in widespread forced displacement, violations of international humanitarian and human laws, severe protection concerns and a food and nutrition crisis of massive proportions.


“Insecurity, especially in swathes of Borno State, continues to hamper humanitarian operations. However, through coordinated logistics and civil-military coordination efforts, humanitarian teams can now access some areas that were previously inaccessible. This has revealed new depth of devastation and humanitarian need,” OCHA said.
The atrocities of Boko Haram is that in most cases whole communities have been destroyed, farmlands set ablaze and the inhabitants killed or kidnapped while women have been serially raped and turned into sex machines and suicide bombers.
The situation is dire! Food is no longer coming from the farms of those communities destroyed by the insurgents while those left behind, if any, are too scared to go their farms for any kind of cultivation. This has brought about a serious threat to food security and opened the potential for starvation and malnutrition across the northeast.


The lingering threats and attacks by the insurgents have also blocked accessibility in some of the states in the northeast to humanitarian assistance providers. According to reports, the prolonged humanitarian crisis has already had a devastating impact on food security and nutrition in the North-eastern part of Nigeria with 5.2 million people currently in need of food assistance in the three most affected states and 450,000 children under five in need of nutrition support.
OCHA, whose officials are already working in the worst affected areas, says that the food situation remains precarious. It notes: “Rapid food assessments were recently carried out in eastern Borno and high food deficits and high food prices remain pronounced across the three areas surveyed in Banki, Gwoza and Pulka.
“In addition, access to vulnerable populations has been limited since July due to insecurity and the rainy season, resulting in convoy delays and an inability to reach some locations,” the agency reported.


The humanitarian situation in the Northeast has become pronounced and caught the attention of the United Nations Secretary General, who recently raised the alarm that at least 20 million people in Nigeria’s Northeast, Somalia, Yemen and South Sudan are facing devastating levels of food security and asked for urgent intervention to avert the disaster.

For instance, in August 2017, the United Nations said that due to insecurity and other access constraints, over 337,000 beneficiaries could not be reached in Borno’s Ngala, Gwoza, Dikwa and Monguno. Insecurity, it was gathered, has also hampered crop assessments and delivery of agricultural inputs in areas like Mobbar, Abadam and Marte local government areas of the state.
The absence of basic facilities for the IDPs and their continued displacement from their comfort zones resulted in cholera outbreak last August. As at August 31, 2017, there were 125 suspected cases of cholera in Maiduguri, Dikwa and Mongono and eight suspected cholera-related deaths.

But apparently in a move to properly organise humanitarian assistance in Nigeria and give succour to the IDPS in the northeast, UNOCHA has scaled up its operations in Nigeria with the launching of Nigerian Humanitarian Fund, NHF, a country-based pooled fund managed by the UNOCHA in support of life-saving humanitarian and recovery operations.
As a result of the launch of the fund, over 90 humanitarian organisations have aided about 4.5 million of the IDPs with nutrition, food, shelter, health, education, protection, water and sanitation support.
UNOCHA has also strengthened its humanitarian leadership in Nigeria with the appointments of new Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Edward Kallon, a veteran in humanitarian work, for Nigeria in addition to the naming of a Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator, Peter Lundberg, to take charge of the epic centre of the Boko Haram insurgency in Maiduguri.


Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, whose state has borne the main brunt of the Boko Haram violence, is certain all the efforts being geared towards solving the problem triggered by the malevolent elements, will produce positive results for the people.
Shettima, who describes himself as an incurable optimist, believes the state will never and can never surrender to the terrorists.
“We will certainly defeat the terrorists and create a conducive atmosphere for the displaced people to return to their communities to re-start their lives,” the governor vowed.
With a war that started as a child’s play, now in its eighth year, taking a toll on the very people who once lived, married and interacted as brothers and sisters, now turning into pogrom, kidnapping and displacement of thousands of households and the animosity generated by it further widening the gulf between the terrorists and the rest of the people and the end not of the onslaught not yet in sight, there is urgent need to strategise on how to put an end to the crisis and save the people.



https://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/11/20m-now-face-devastation-un-ranks-nigeria-somalia-yemen-south-sudan/
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 4:54am On Nov 25, 2017
It was expected. As a matter of fact Nigeria is a failed state putting up appearances to the international community it's only a matter of time till it blows open fully. I pray we don't get there though but with the menacing problems eating us up from SARS, boko haram, Fulani militias, corrupt politicians, inequality and ethnic tensions, it's only but a matter of time before we become another Somalia.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by GetUmad: 4:59am On Nov 25, 2017
jumpandpas:
… Counts real cost of a fratricidal Boko Haram war

By Soni Daniel with UN report

Eight years after Boko Haram launched a senseless war that has claimed over 20,000 lives and displaced over 1.8 million people now scattered in IDP camps across North Eastern Nigeria, the real cost of the fratricidal war now beckons: 8.5 million people are in urgent need of life-saving assistance, 5.2 million are in dire need of food security interventions and 3.4 in urgent need of nutrition assistance. But the fund for all of this is not readily available, putting the fate of the victims in the balance and their future in uncertainty.


Halima, three, is sitting on the bare floor close to her 21-year-old mother, Sadiatu, and they are actively muttering some words to each other. The time is about 2pm on a Tuesday and they have not yet had their breakfast due to the fact that there is no food in their new abode and the money to do so, is not available.
Boko Haram

Their abode, known as Bakassi IDP Camp, in Maiduguri the Borno State Capital, is holding them and thousands of other persons violently displaced from their ancestral homes and communities in many parts of the state and thrown into despondency, fear and distress by the Boko Haram terrorists, who have since 2009 been killing, maiming and kidnapping people in pursuit of an agenda: the declaration of a Caliphate where western education would be outlawed.


As a reporter gets close to Sadiatu and her daughter to figure out the reason for their pensive mood, the mother offered a clue: “We don’t have anything in this house and we don’t know where our next meal will come from,” Sadiatu lamented.
As she narrates her jeremiad to a team of reporters, other occupants of the make-shift camp- a housing estate planned by the Borno State Government but hurriedly converted to a holding camp for the displaced victims, many other IPDs gather around to describe their pitiable situations.


Adamu Shehu, 12, an orphan, is moving from one hut in the camp to the other in search of any form of provision, having lost her two parents to the Boko Haram terrorists when they struck Gwoza over three years ago. Beyond the violent killing of his parents, Adamu said their home was razed by the insurgents and other members of the family killed, wounded or taken away to unknown destination.

Sadiatu, Halima and Adamu are just a few of the thousands of IDPs squatting at the Bakassi Camp provided by the Borno State Government and receiving material and logistical support from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, UNOCHA. No fewer than five of such camps have been provided by the Borno State Government to provide temporary accommodation for the IDPs and protect them from further exploitation by their tormentors.
The three are among the 1.8 million victims of the Boko Haram insurgency, which has claimed no fewer than 20,000 lives and destroyed many hitherto flourishing communities and displaced their inhabitants across the six north east states of Nigeria, sparking one of the world’s worst refugee scenarios.


According to OCHA, the humanitarian crisis in Nigeria’s Northeast and the Lake Chad region is one of the most severe in the world today with 8.5 million in need of humanitarian assistance in 2017 in the worst affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe with the war now in its eighth year, showing no signs of abating.
Beyond the 8.5 people in need of humanitarian assistance, no fewer than 1.7 million according to OCHA, are internally displaced in the three states, with 80 percent of them in Borno State alone, the epic centre of the crisis and over half of them living outside IDP camps in local communities, who are themselves said to be among the world’s poorest people.

Aside that, 6.1 million people in the area are in need of protection while no fewer than 4000 women and girls are reported to have been abducted since 2009 by the insurgents.
UNOCHA in its latest update on the crisis entitled, Northeast: Humanitarian Review, noted, “Civilians continue to bear the brunt of a conflict that has resulted in widespread forced displacement, violations of international humanitarian and human laws, severe protection concerns and a food and nutrition crisis of massive proportions.


“Insecurity, especially in swathes of Borno State, continues to hamper humanitarian operations. However, through coordinated logistics and civil-military coordination efforts, humanitarian teams can now access some areas that were previously inaccessible. This has revealed new depth of devastation and humanitarian need,” OCHA said.
The atrocities of Boko Haram is that in most cases whole communities have been destroyed, farmlands set ablaze and the inhabitants killed or kidnapped while women have been serially raped and turned into sex machines and suicide bombers.
The situation is dire! Food is no longer coming from the farms of those communities destroyed by the insurgents while those left behind, if any, are too scared to go their farms for any kind of cultivation. This has brought about a serious threat to food security and opened the potential for starvation and malnutrition across the northeast.


The lingering threats and attacks by the insurgents have also blocked accessibility in some of the states in the northeast to humanitarian assistance providers. According to reports, the prolonged humanitarian crisis has already had a devastating impact on food security and nutrition in the North-eastern part of Nigeria with 5.2 million people currently in need of food assistance in the three most affected states and 450,000 children under five in need of nutrition support.
OCHA, whose officials are already working in the worst affected areas, says that the food situation remains precarious. It notes: “Rapid food assessments were recently carried out in eastern Borno and high food deficits and high food prices remain pronounced across the three areas surveyed in Banki, Gwoza and Pulka.
“In addition, access to vulnerable populations has been limited since July due to insecurity and the rainy season, resulting in convoy delays and an inability to reach some locations,” the agency reported.


The humanitarian situation in the Northeast has become pronounced and caught the attention of the United Nations Secretary General, who recently raised the alarm that at least 20 million people in Nigeria’s Northeast, Somalia, Yemen and South Sudan are facing devastating levels of food security and asked for urgent intervention to avert the disaster.

For instance, in August 2017, the United Nations said that due to insecurity and other access constraints, over 337,000 beneficiaries could not be reached in Borno’s Ngala, Gwoza, Dikwa and Monguno. Insecurity, it was gathered, has also hampered crop assessments and delivery of agricultural inputs in areas like Mobbar, Abadam and Marte local government areas of the state.
The absence of basic facilities for the IDPs and their continued displacement from their comfort zones resulted in cholera outbreak last August. As at August 31, 2017, there were 125 suspected cases of cholera in Maiduguri, Dikwa and Mongono and eight suspected cholera-related deaths.

But apparently in a move to properly organise humanitarian assistance in Nigeria and give succour to the IDPS in the northeast, UNOCHA has scaled up its operations in Nigeria with the launching of Nigerian Humanitarian Fund, NHF, a country-based pooled fund managed by the UNOCHA in support of life-saving humanitarian and recovery operations.
As a result of the launch of the fund, over 90 humanitarian organisations have aided about 4.5 million of the IDPs with nutrition, food, shelter, health, education, protection, water and sanitation support.
UNOCHA has also strengthened its humanitarian leadership in Nigeria with the appointments of new Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Edward Kallon, a veteran in humanitarian work, for Nigeria in addition to the naming of a Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator, Peter Lundberg, to take charge of the epic centre of the Boko Haram insurgency in Maiduguri.


Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, whose state has borne the main brunt of the Boko Haram violence, is certain all the efforts being geared towards solving the problem triggered by the malevolent elements, will produce positive results for the people.
Shettima, who describes himself as an incurable optimist, believes the state will never and can never surrender to the terrorists.
“We will certainly defeat the terrorists and create a conducive atmosphere for the displaced people to return to their communities to re-start their lives,” the governor vowed.
With a war that started as a child’s play, now in its eighth year, taking a toll on the very people who once lived, married and interacted as brothers and sisters, now turning into pogrom, kidnapping and displacement of thousands of households and the animosity generated by it further widening the gulf between the terrorists and the rest of the people and the end not of the onslaught not yet in sight, there is urgent need to strategise on how to put an end to the crisis and save the people.



https://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/11/20m-now-face-devastation-un-ranks-nigeria-somalia-yemen-south-sudan/
How can someone quote this whole epistle without saying anything meaningful.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by odogwubiafra: 5:00am On Nov 25, 2017
Under the watchful eyes of the Buhari led incompetent APC, Nigeria has fallen apart. Negative reports everywhere.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 5:14am On Nov 25, 2017
GREAT!

Go
On
With
One
Nigeria .................

Go On With Failure

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by ojlifa: 5:22am On Nov 25, 2017
All this fake news with fake figures to paint a fake picture of Nigeria to the world.only a fool will believe that bokoharam which is operating in just 5 local government out of 774 local government which is neither in lagos nor kano displaced 10% of the total Nigerian population.if this truly came from the UN then it is either of two things.the UN are reckless liers or the people working at the UN are useless workers with an agenda

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 5:33am On Nov 25, 2017
ojlifa:
All this fake news with fake figures to paint a fake picture of Nigeria to the world.only a fool will believe that bokoharam which is operating in just 5 local government out of 774 local government which is neither in lagos nor kano displaced 10% of the total Nigerian population.if this truly came from the UN then it is either of two things.the UN are reckless liers or the people working at the UN are useless workers with an agenda

NGO's are like contractors, they use third world countries to inflate budgets.

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by dabeto: 5:36am On Nov 25, 2017
Did UN consult with Lai Mohammed before issuing this report
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by SalamRushdie: 5:43am On Nov 25, 2017
TheCabal:


NGO's are like contractors, they use third world countries to inflate budgets.

Its a pity if yiu dont realiseghat Nigeria is currently the most unlivable place on earth..Take a look at all the indices bein released and compare it with the realitu on ground then you will know pouns for pound Nigeria is the worst country on earth currently...The bihari govt has failed and it has failed immensely

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by jumpandpas(m): 5:48am On Nov 25, 2017
ojlifa:
All this fake news with fake figures to paint a fake picture of Nigeria to the world.only a fool will believe that bokoharam which is operating in just 5 local government out of 774 local government which is neither in lagos nor kano displaced 10% of the total Nigerian population.if this truly came from the UN then it is either of two things.the UN are reckless liers or the people working at the UN are useless workers with an agenda


No body is painting a fake picture of Nigeria to the world, even pmb told the world that Nigerians are corrupt. The truth is that some Northern elements are benefiting from Boko Haram hence their total eradication becomes impossible. Are you not surprise that till this moment no arrest has been made on the sponsors of Boko Haram. Don't forget that Buhari was their spokesman, his inability to look into the sponsors of Boko Haram makes him a suspect, it seems that he's afraid of something.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 5:49am On Nov 25, 2017
SalamRushdie:


Its a pity if yiu dont realiseghat Nigeria is currently the most unlivable place on earth..Take a look at all the indices bein released and compare it with the realitu on ground then you will know pouns for pound Nigeria is the worst country on earth currently...The bihari govt has failed and it has failed immensely

Take a boat to Spain then.

Lazy Nigerian youths, crying since 1999. grin

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by jumpandpas(m): 5:53am On Nov 25, 2017
TheCabal:


NGO's are like contractors, they use third world countries to inflate budgets.


This your summation that UN is like NGO contractors is wrong. If Buhari and APC are sincere to themselves, they should have apologized to Nigerians even before now. Their government has been all about lies, deceit and propaganda.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by SalamRushdie: 5:54am On Nov 25, 2017
TheCabal:


Take a boat to Spain then.

Lazy Nigerian youths, crying since 1999. grin

I am more sucessful and more hardworking than most of the men in ur family so say something else ..Go and take a look at all the indices and see how we claim the bottom spot in almost all of them .

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by jumpandpas(m): 5:56am On Nov 25, 2017
TheCabal:

Take a boat to Spain then.
Lazy Nigerian youths, crying since 1999. grin

He told you the truth you can't handle.

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by jumpandpas(m): 6:00am On Nov 25, 2017
SalamRushdie:


I am more sucessful and more hardworking than most of the men in ur family so say something else ..Go and take a look at all the indices and see how we claim the bottom spot in almost all of them .



Nigeria is only good in the mouths of APC and her supporters, when you confront them with the reality on ground they will start calling you names.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by PointZerom: 6:04am On Nov 25, 2017
ojlifa:
All this fake news with fake figures to paint a fake picture of Nigeria to the world.only a fool will believe that bokoharam which is operating in just 5 local government out of 774 local government which is neither in lagos nor kano displaced 10% of the total Nigerian population.if this truly came from the UN then it is either of two things.the UN are reckless liers or the people working at the UN are useless workers with an agenda


Stop ranting and counter UN with facts. Your Nigeria is a Ghost of herself... kiss the truth.

1 Like

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by PointZerom: 6:05am On Nov 25, 2017
TheCabal:

Take a boat to Spain then.
Lazy Nigerian youths, crying since 1999. grin

Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by MONITZ: 6:08am On Nov 25, 2017
One of the indices of a failed state,anyone who thinks Nigeria is working or would get out of the doldrums had better have a rethink because these crops of leaders re not smart or concerned enough to want to pull the stunt of making the country work...It is indeed a pity for the most populous black nation on earth...
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by PointZerom: 6:08am On Nov 25, 2017
dabeto:
Did UN consult with Lai Mohammed before issuing this report


When buhari told the whole world that Nigerians are corrupt, who did he consult before issuing such report?.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 4:55pm On Nov 25, 2017
.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by Nobody: 4:56pm On Nov 25, 2017
SalamRushdie:


I am more sucessful and more hardworking than most of the men in ur family so say something else ..Go and take a look at all the indices and see how we claim the bottom spot in almost all of them .


Depends on how most men in my family define success. You are the first "professing" successful man, I know that complains about bad "indices".

Like I said, head to North America or Europe. I am sure you can get stellar indices in those areas, once you marry a fat ugly white woman or an oversexed African American/Brit.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by ojlifa: 5:02pm On Nov 25, 2017
If what I just wrote isn't fact enough,then you need help.you slave
PointZerom:



Stop ranting and counter UN with facts. Your Nigeria is a Ghost of herself... kiss the truth.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by ojlifa: 5:04pm On Nov 25, 2017
The question here are the figures painted ,not corruption and if you must know corruption is every where in the world.in the united states it is even legal.go and find out what a lobbist is



jumpandpas:



No body is painting a fake picture of Nigeria to the world, even pmb told the world that Nigerians are corrupt. The truth is that some Northern elements are benefiting from Boko Haram hence their total eradication becomes impossible. Are you not surprise that till this moment no arrest has been made on the sponsors of Boko Haram. Don't forget that Buhari was their spokesman, his inability to look into the sponsors of Boko Haram makes him a suspect, it seems that he's afraid of something.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by ojlifa: 5:07pm On Nov 25, 2017
God bless you.so you have an idea what I was talking about


TheCabal:


NGO's are like contractors, they use third world countries to inflate budgets.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by madridguy(m): 5:11pm On Nov 25, 2017
This is serious.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by PointZerom: 9:08pm On Nov 25, 2017
ojlifa:
If what I just wrote isn't fact enough,then you need help.you slave


mynd44 lalasticlala Seun front page Pls.
Re: As 20m Now Face Devastation, UN Ranks Nigeria With Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan by PointZerom: 9:11pm On Nov 25, 2017
ojlifa:
The question here are the figures painted ,not corruption and if you must know corruption is every where in the world.in the united states it is even legal.go and find out what a lobbist is





They're quick to defend their pay masters.

(1) (Reply)

PHOTO: U.P.N GOVERNORS - Flashback To The Pride Of Yorubas / Bad News Propaganda Goes Wrong For IPOB Bureau Of Statistics / Police Arrest Don Wanney’s Arms Supplier

(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. 93
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.