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Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE - Politics - Nairaland

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Yusuf Gagdi & Baba Hassan Campaign On A Bike In Jos, Plateau State / Nigerian Navy Launches New Warship / Admiral Ibas Launches Keel Of Nigeria's New Warship. (2) (3) (4)

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Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:12am On Jan 09, 2021
UThe keel of the new Landing Ship Tank was laid in December 2019. See previous thread here:

Admiral Ibas Launches Keel Of Nigeria's New Warship.
https://www.nairaland.com/5573742/admiral-ibas-launches-keel-nigerias


GAGDI ON FOREIGN OVERSIGHT DUTY, INSPECTS LST 100 WARSHIP OF THE NIGERIAN NAVY IN AJMAN STATE OF THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATE.

In pursuance of his legislative function to oversee activities of the Nigerian Navy, and his innate desire for a robust Navy and improved security of Nigerian waterways, the Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Navy, Rt Hon. Yusuf Adamu Gagdi was in Ajman State of United Arab Emirate to inspect a Warship of the Nigerian Navy under construction by Albwarsdy Damen, a reputable warship Construction Company in the UAE.

The lawmaker, who inspected the multimillion dollar project, was taken round the facilities of the company in order to further appreciate the technical competence of the company to deliver the project.

Tagged LST 100 Warship, the project is expected to be completed on the 18th May, 2021 and be delivered to the Nigerian Navy on 9th March, 2022. The project was at 75 percent completion when the parliamentarian inspected the Warship. Meanwhile, the company has assured of a timely delivery of the Warship in accordance with the terms of the contract without let or hindrance of any kind.

The essence of the foreign oversight inspection of the facility was to ensure finances appropriated for the Nigerian Navy are expended as provided in the budgetary allocation of the armed force.

Expressing delight with the quality of the project, the lawmaker maintains that Nigerian Navy has been one of the most vibrant armed forces in Nigeria, with a near excellent performance record; hence the need to encourage them with the required facilities for optimal discharge of their responsibilities.

The lawmaker had earlier in 2020, led his committee members to oversight visit of all Naval formations across Nigeria in order to be fully abreast with the successes, challenges and future projections of the Nigerian Navy, thereby capping the oversight duty with visits to various ongoing projects of the armed force outside the shores of Nigeria.

Foreign oversight visits to other projects of the Nigerian Navy in the US, Germany, South Africa and UK are in the offing.

Gagdi is expected to be back in the country on Friday, 8th January 2021.

Signed:
Gagdi Media Team

https://www.facebook.com/311896246059305/posts/690488161533443/

4 Likes

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:12am On Jan 09, 2021
naptu2:
Amphibious vessels and carriers

1) Landing Ship Tank (LST) : A landing ship tank is a kind of naval vessel that can carry tanks, trucks, SUVs, etc and land them directly on shore without requiring port facilities. LSTs usually have a roll-on-roll-off (RORO) ramp with which vehicles can roll ashore or onto the ship without needing a crane to carry them.

A Dravo built LST landing a tank on a beach during World War II.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10707346_1297433917221944447045222577419552641706331n_jpeg712008502bf122dd0b20e66de6374c0e

Landing ship tanks were very important in the Pacific theatre of World War 2, when Commonwealth and US forces battled the Japanese from island to island. They ferried men, vehicles and other materials from captured island to the next island battlefield.

LSTs were also very important to Ecomog operations in Liberia and Sierra Leone. They carried nigerian troops and equipment to Liberia and Sierra Leone and they also carried refugees in the opposite direction.

NNS Ambe. NNS Ambe has a regular ramp at the rear of the ship (just like the World War 2 LST pictured above) and it also has an articulated ramp in front (which is why the front is higher than other parts of the ship). The ramp in front can be lowered and extended when the ship wants to offload its cargo in very shallow water. NNS Ambe played a very important role in Nigeria's Ecomog operations in Liberia.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10707347_1301080017201325749107094723537584321502138n_jpeg720043c7b964dbc871078d573022efee

2) Amphibious landing ship (Landing Ship Dock, Landing Ship Platform, etc) : Landing ship tanks have one disadvantage. They need to get to shore in order to land their cargo. This could be quite difficult if there are opposing forces on land (the LST could easily be hit by shore gun and missile batteries). For example, NNS Ambe could not land its cargo immediately it got to the Free Port of Monrovia because there was a battle between Charles Taylor's NPFL and the Armed Forces Of Liberia of Samuel Doe. Taylor's forces actually fired mortar rounds at NNS Ambe and its escorts.

USS Harper's Ferry (amphibious landing ship)
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731209_1_jpeg83b5009e040969ee7b60362ad7426573


This problem was resolved by the creation of amphibious landing ships (eg, landing ship dock). Amphibious landing ships have well docks within them from which a zodiac rubber raft, landing boat or an amphibious fighting vehicle can be launched at sea. An amphibious landing ship does not need to go near the shore. It can stay off shore, well out of range of shore defences and launch invading marines and vehicles.

An Amphibious Assault Vehicle (AAV) assigned to the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) prepares to enter the well deck of the USS Harpers Ferry (LSD 49). (Sea of Japan, March 22nd, 2006).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731210_2_jpegea571676ce9b75b0730a5d56350ae93e



US marines in an Assault Amphibious Vehicle during their assessment test at Camp Pendelton.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731211_3_jpeg182845aceb39c9e413e28fd549058cf8


Assault Amphibious Vehicle

www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731212_4_jpeg9679ccb5a92f650b83fcf29e0a6a6775


www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731224_5_jpegddf9c9a45551e218c4018d5c53e9f6bb


AAVs preparing to debark USS Gunston Hall (LSD 44)
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731225_6_jpegc57de7ffb63a04971dc3a933cf2f080d

Quarter view of a Soviet Ivan Rogov class ship (amphibious landing ship).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731226_7_jpegaba4c12c0307ac56aedf5e7b2dadf69b


The amphibious landing ship USS Tortuga (LSD 46) deploys Amphibious Assault Vehicles from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (31st MEU) for a landing at Gray Beach, Philippines during Balikatan 2009 joint exercise (April 14, 2009).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731227_8_jpeg4f84f02beb6427bc9a6d8d09d2376746
Tracked amphibious fighting vehicles like the Assault Amphibious Vehicle propel themselves with their tracks when they are in water, while amphibious fighting vehicles that have tyres propel themselves with water jets.

3) Helicopter carrier: this refers to naval vessels whose primary purpose is to carry military helicopters (helicopter gunships, naval helicopters, transport helicopters, etc). Helicopter carriers were used during World War 2, but went out of style after the war, largely because aircraft carriers could carry both planes and helicopters.

4) Amphibious assault ships: Amphibious assault ships are basically a combination of amphibious landing ships and helicopter carriers. They have a well dock from which they can launch landing crafts and they also have a small flight deck from which they can launch helicopters. The basic idea is that the amphibious assault ships carry attack helicopters which can provide air support to the marines as they go ashore. Some amphibious assault ships also carry vertical take off/landing (VTO/L) aircraft like the Harrier Jump Jet and tiltrotor aircraft like the Boeing V22 Osprey. An amphibious assault ship can therefore stay offshore and launch a full scale invasion.

A landing craft utility (LCU) prepares to dock in the flooded well deck of the USS Essex (Wasp class amphibious assault ship).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731230_9_jpeg02519bfb266773f243fdef49420313d1

The USS Essex receives a landing craft utility (LCU) carrying elements of the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit while off the coast of Thailand after completing Cobra Gold 2008 joint exercise (CG08). June 9, 2008.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731231_10_jpeg549cfc258b5b09317e51edf0d640cf8d

Amphibious assault ships are also used during refugee crises because they have enough space to accomodate the refugees, helicopters that can be used for extraction and marines to provide security.

Assault Amphibious Vehicles in the well deck of the USS San Antonio (9th March, 2008)
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731232_11_jpegf7f163af78812e58c4d3c47b4e396ae6

A Landing Craft Utility (LCU) returns to the well deck of USS Belleau Wood (LHA 3 amphibious assault ship) during a Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) offload. The landing craft is transporting Marines, vehicles and their gear to the shores of Kuwait (7 July 2004).

www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731233_12_jpegd077e4317cde1e70737c7d5616929159

5) Air craft carriers: Air craft carriers are large naval vessels that carry both vertical take off/landing (VTO/L) and short take off/landing (STOL) aircraft (both rotary and fixed wing). An aircraft carrier is like a floating airport and it is the biggest type of naval ship currently in use.

USS Nimitz
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731238_13_jpege02b5f50d064103233b3adee3b96a510

Aircraft carriers enable militaries conduct air operations far away from their homeland. They are one of the main means by which the great military powers of the world project force.


Naval vessels from five nations sail in parade formation for a rare photographic opportunity at sea. In four descending columns, from left to right: ITS Maestrale (F 570 Frigate), De Grasse (D 612 Frigate); USS John C. Stennis (CVN-74 Aircraft Carrier), Charles de Gaulle (R91 Aircraft Carrier), Surcouf (F 711 frigate); USS Port Royal (CG-73 guided missile cruiser), HMS Ocean (L12 amphibious assault ship), USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67 air craft carrier), ITS Luigi Durand de la Penne (D560 destroyer); and HNLMS Van Amstel (F 831 Frigate).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10731239_14_jpegdcf816fe7054b0a74c353321030b73ce

Abreviations:

NNS = Nigerian Navy Ship.
USS = United States Ship.
HMS = Her Majesty's Ship (Britain).
HNLMS = Her Netherlands Majesty's Ship.
ITS = Italian Ship.

14 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:12am On Jan 09, 2021
naptu2:
This is going to be very interesting. Although this is a landing ship tank, it's going to have two major differences from our old LSTs.

1) It's going to have a helicopter deck.

2) It's going to have a landing craft, vehicle, personnel (LCVP).

I'd really like to see how the LCVP will be deployed.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:14am On Jan 09, 2021
naptu2:
I can still remember NTA's very first report from Liberia (in 1990) as if it was yesterday. The cameraman was with the troops on either NNS Ambe or NNS Ofiom (I can't remember exactly which of the LSTs) and he was filming the Port of Monrovia from the ship when a battle broke out between Samuel Doe's men and Charles Taylor's men. We could hear the explosions from the port and see the black smoke in the sky.

It took some time, but Doe's men were able to retain control of the port and the Nigerian soldiers landed safely.

I can't remember the name of the NTA correspondent.


naptu2:

1) Landing Ship Tank (LST) : A landing ship tank is a kind of naval vessel that can carry tanks, trucks, SUVs, etc and land them directly on shore without requiring port facilities. LSTs usually have a roll-on-roll-off (RORO) ramp with which vehicles can roll ashore or onto the ship without needing a crane to carry them.

A Dravo built LST landing a tank on a beach during World War II.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10707346_1297433917221944447045222577419552641706331n_jpeg712008502bf122dd0b20e66de6374c0e

Landing ship tanks were very important in the Pacific theatre of World War 2, when Commonwealth and US forces battled the Japanese from island to island. They ferried men, vehicles and other materials from captured island to the next island battlefield.

LSTs were also very important to Ecomog operations in Liberia and Sierra Leone. They carried nigerian troops and equipment to Liberia and Sierra Leone and they also carried refugees in the opposite direction.

NNS Ambe. NNS Ambe has a regular ramp at the rear of the ship (just like the World War 2 LST pictured above) and it also has an articulated ramp in front (which is why the front is higher than other parts of the ship). The ramp in front can be lowered and extended when the ship wants to offload its cargo in very shallow water. NNS Ambe played a very important role in Nigeria's Ecomog operations in Liberia.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/10707347_1301080017201325749107094723537584321502138n_jpeg720043c7b964dbc871078d573022efee


naptu2: NNS Ambe (LST1312)
www.nairaland.com/attachments/295749_NNS_Ambe_jpg9518d5695f60a0083c94f835b0588908
The landing ship tank, NNS Ambe, undergoing repairs.

I first knew what it was in 1990. On the 9 o'clock news they showed troops preparing to sail to Liberia. Its hull opened and armoured tanks, personnel carriers and fighting vehicles were rolling into it (or was it its sister ship, the Ofiom?). It's a Landing Ship Tank (LST)! The C130 of the navy.

I wish we had amphibious landing ships and amphibious assault ships.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:14am On Jan 09, 2021
NNS Ambe Hippo-class Type 502 class LST

The Type 502 class LSTs Ambe and Ofion were designed by HDW as a private-venture for sale to the West German navy, which was not interested. The warship displaces 1,750 tons fully loaded and has a length of 87m and a beam of 14m. The ship is powered by two diesel engines each driving twin shafts and can maintain a speed of 17 knots. She would normally carry a crew of 59. Armament is light, consisting of several anti aircraft guns and two 20mm machine guns. They are of ro-ro design, with a lowerable stern loading ramp and articulated bow ramp. The machinery is unusual in that each engine drives multiple shafts instead of the normal other way around.

Typical load configuration options

5 T-54/55 tanks + x4 trucks or artillery pieces + x35 fully-equipped marines

10 BTR-60 APCs + x66 fully-equipped marines

540 fully-equipped marines

Both ships suffered minor fires during the 1980s which were repaired, but maintenance on the bow ramp machinery was poor and by 1992 both vessels had non-operational ramps. Several sources state that both ships had ramps welded shut, rendering them transports instead of LSTs.

Ofiom was severely damaged during a failed beaching in 1992 and was abandoned pierside. In 1999, a contract was signed with foreign technicians to repair the ship however in April 2001 they departed due to non-payment, with only half the repairs completed. NNS Ofion had not been operational for over two decades while some of her parts had been used over time to replace some faulty parts of Ambe. In 2011 it was announced that the Nigerian navy again planned to finish the repairs.

NNS Ofiom emerged winners of the First Nigerian Navy Ship 2009 WEY C.O's Cup after defeating the NNS AMBE 4-2. The event which began on September 18th 2009 saw the two contending sides NNS Ofiom and NNS AMBE qualifying for the grand finale. Both sides dismissed their opponents with ease on their way to the final and Navy Town residents looked forward to a great final. The competition came to an end at the Road 3 Football field Navy Town, Lagos, after weeks of exciting football action.

NNS Ambe, one of the two amphibious vessels acquired by the Federal Government of Nigeria in 1978 was said to have been the country's only operational Amphibious war ship used for lifting a battalion and their equipment as the second, NNS Ofion, was almost a carcass as major parts have been used to keep the burnt Ambe in shape. The ship had a capacity of lifting a battalion of 600 soldiers and their equipment at once. NNS Ambe, which became fully operational in the 1980s, played a significant roles during the ECOMOG operations in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Over 72000 refugees were sea-lifted from Liberia to Nigeria by NNS AMBE and some merchant ships. Transport ships loaded with troops and equipment of the five-nation Economic Community of West African States Military Observation Group (ECOMOG) entered the port of Monrovia. During the afternoon of 24 August 1990, Nigeria’s NNS Ambe (LST 1123) and Ghana’s MV Tano River maneuvered to the mouth of the jetty area of Freeport. They temporarily withdrew after receiving some sporadic mortar fire and reentered the port later that evening. After docking, a small mix of troops debarked.

In Liberia during the ECOMOG operations, the NA could not integrate fully with NN. The problems encountered by the 2 Services was the delayed movement into Liberia from Sierra Leone as a result of malfunction of the loading ramp on the LST. Even when the ramp was repaired through combined efforts of the NN and NA Engineers, the problem re-occurred on landing at Freeport Monrovia. Also the armaments carried by the LST were not functional. This had impacted negatively on the confidence and high morale of the NA troops. The reason for these problems were attributed to lack of training for joint operations by the NA and NN before induction into the operation in Liberia.

On 02 December 1997 Sierra Leone's military junta accused Nigeria on Tuesday of moving an amphibious tank landing ship and two support vessels into Sierra Leone's territorial waters. A military spokesman said the NNS Ambe and two support ships had anchored 30 nautical miles off the Sierra Leonean coast before pulling back into international waters. "The three Nigerian warships which anchored about 30 nautical miles in Sierra Leone territorial waters have sailed back into international waters from their former position," the spokesman said.

She was also used in ferreting of drug from Europe to Nigeria at a time when there was said to be scarcity of drugs in Nigeria. In July 2001 naval authorities said that five warships in the Nigerian Navy inventory, including NNS Siri, NNS Ekun, NNS Nyam and the Frigate, NNS Ambe, would be seaworthy by December 2001 after undergoing retrofitting. In 2004 the Navy commenced refitting activities on NNS Ambe and NNS Ofiom. But within a few years NNS Ambe was reported out of commission in a poor condition.

Operation TAKUTE EKPE (Lion Trap) was held 10-15 May 2004. There were difficulties in establishing radio communications between NNS AMBE, the ship that was to beach land the troops and other participating forces. TAKUTE EKPE was aborted at the last minute because NNS AMBE, the main amphibious ship, failed to arrive at the designated landing site at the scheduled time ostensibly due to defects. On that occasion, NN operational efficiency suffered due to no ship availability. The NN landing ship that was to land troops in the theater of operation never got there until after the exercise had been deactivated because the state of the ship was not considered in the planning of the exercise. The NN ship was unserviceable and yet it was earmarked for the exercise. This was a typical example of an exercise marred by poor logistic planning and lack of coordination due to the absence of a joint logistics system.

Nigerian Naval Dockyard at Wilmot Point, Lagos was commissioned in 1990 to undertake refit of Nigerian Naval Ships. Although the naval dockyard has been in commission from 1990, it was only in 2003 that a comprehensive and structured program of refitting the entire fleet began in earnest. In 2007 NNS Ambe was undergoing refit. some marine engineers were carrying out some repairs that required welding when fire at about 2130 hours on 20 November 2007, in the superstructure of the ship. The fire was extinguished by the timely action of the Lagos State Fire Service, but by some accounts the vessel was reportedly destroyed by the fire. The fire was confined to an above deck section of the ship and the damage is considered to be minor. This happened at a time there was renewed tension in the Bakassi Peninsula, itself an Island, that would require the use of the NNS Ambe to lift troops.

In 2010, troop carrier landing craft NNS AMBE of the Nigerian Navy under repair at Navy dock yard, Wilmot Point, Lagos had caught fire under her starboard bridge deck. Ambe suffered a severe fire which started in her cargo deck and spread upwards under the starboard side of the bridge. The bridge and radio room were destroyed, and the crew berthing spaces severely damaged. The fire burnt out the entire bridge and part of the accommodation, leaving the main mast tilted to starboard on top of the compass deck which had also been seriously damaged.

In August 2010 a civilian company, Atlantic Marine Services, was contracted to remove the mast. AMS was called in to remove the mast as it was threatening to collapse. With the help of their tug EXPLORER they mobilized their 1000dwt barge H457 and their Leibherr HS871 crane alongside the NNS AMBE. The mast was secured, cut and lifted off on 13 August 2010 and delivered to NNS Olokun maintenance yard for further dismantling and repair. Since them Ambe was moored at the Wilmot Point naval dockyard in Lagos awaiting repairs.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by naptu2: 9:14am On Jan 09, 2021
More pictures of the visit.

2 Likes

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by joseph1832(m): 9:15am On Jan 09, 2021
grin
Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Georgry(m): 9:15am On Jan 09, 2021
tongue

1 Like

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Englov(m): 9:39am On Jan 09, 2021
Ok

1 Like

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by GeneralPula: 9:39am On Jan 09, 2021
I laugh in Under construction grin

21 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by faithfull18(f): 9:40am On Jan 09, 2021
They keep exporting money that should be used here to other countries. Then, Nigeria pays for other countries labour and keeps them afloat.

When they could have brought in few experts to do the construction here, Nigerians get to understudy them for subsequent builds, they get to spend less on labour that way.

51 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Baawaa(m): 9:41am On Jan 09, 2021
Billions of Naira has gone,

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Otaiky(m): 9:41am On Jan 09, 2021
ok....���
Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by BigDawsNet: 9:42am On Jan 09, 2021
Thank Goodness for the new warship

NK and Russia abeg let arrange friendly

6 Likes

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by flybiz08(m): 9:42am On Jan 09, 2021
Under construction?

From UAE? Can the UAE even protect themselves?

My opinion is under construction.

What do I know?

22 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by izzou(m): 9:42am On Jan 09, 2021
Is this the first one we would be having?

Good development though
Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by papaput2(m): 9:42am On Jan 09, 2021
quota system inspection.. audio war ship

Until the Nigeria government start recruiting the best brain with no higher connection to occupy this sensitive position we will always remain in the shadow..

Government of the North ...all sensitive position... given to them by force leaving out the best brain to fly out..

15 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Tremple8v: 9:43am On Jan 09, 2021
Hope no be audio sha .

1 Like

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by DaBillionnaire: 9:43am On Jan 09, 2021
Baawaa:
Billions of Naira has gone,

I
Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by moneyissweet(m): 9:43am On Jan 09, 2021
Everything they must travel to obodo oyibo to squander money when we have competent engineers in Nigeria.

Look at the way he is standing and looking as if he know anything there.

Criminals

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by MANNABBQGRILLS: 9:43am On Jan 09, 2021
This is massively massive mehn!

Nigerian Navy has been one of the most vibrant armed forces in Nigeria, with a near excellent performance record; hence the need to encourage them with the required facilities for optimal discharge of their responsibilities.

From one gigantic project to another.
May God forever bless our darling Daddy President Muhammadu Buhari and his amiable Vice president Prof Yemi Osinbajo as they make our once looted and vandalized nation work again.

God bless Nigeria.

Excel3298:
Good one from the Nigeria government.
You can say that again.

Kobicove:
Assembling CKD parts is not the same as making the entire components from scratch!
naptu2:
grin grin
CKD parts from where??
Naptu,
You get time dey reply dis kind people sef.
They never like to see any good and positive news towards Nigeria lailai!
Waste of space.

Baawaa:
Billions of Naira has gone,
hopexter:
It didn't go for nothing. It's needed.
Thanks for lecturing Baawaa as an elder brother.
He has learnt something today. cool

5 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by dazzlingd(m): 9:43am On Jan 09, 2021
It must be aboki, abokis everywhere...

A country where appointments are so lopsided..
Nepotism and injustice and u expect such country to move forward....abokis everywhere

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by MANNABBQGRILLS: 9:44am On Jan 09, 2021
Tremple8v:
Hope no be audio sha .
No, Na Video......

4 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by MANNABBQGRILLS: 9:44am On Jan 09, 2021
dazzlingd:
It must be aboki
He is a Nigerian.

6 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by sacajawea: 9:44am On Jan 09, 2021
Ehen! So it's true? Dubai companies can now handle reliable engineering, Auto and Science Projects/Contracts.
Maybe I will look into them fully from now on, No Country or Region has monopoly on Quality.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by Kobicove(m): 9:44am On Jan 09, 2021
We can't even make ordinary bicycle from scratch sad

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yusuf Gagdi Inspects Nigerian Navy's New Warship Under Construction In UAE by damiloladuke: 9:44am On Jan 09, 2021
ok

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