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A Nigerian Navy officer, Lieutenant Adam Muhammad Yerima, has been accused of breaching aviation security protocols after allegedly bypassing mandatory passenger screening and attempting to board a commercial flight with a pistol. SaharaReporters learnt that Lieutenant Yerima, who is known in public discourse for previously confronting the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Nyesom Wike, gained access to the boarding terminal through the military wing of the airport. SaharaReporters further gathered that Lieutenant Yerima entered the boarding terminal through the military wing of the airport, thereby avoiding standard civilian security screening procedures, before attempting to board a ValueJet Airlines flight. The officer reportedly accused the airline of "disrespect" after he was stopped for breaching aviation regulations. According to multiple sources familiar with the incident, which occurred at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, the lieutenant was armed with a pistol — an item strictly prohibited for passengers on commercial flights under Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) regulations unless properly declared and handled through approved security channels. Sources told SaharaReporters that airline security officials noticed the breach and prevented Yerima from boarding the aircraft with the firearm. They insisted that he complies with civil aviation rules applicable to all passengers, including uniformed personnel travelling on commercial flights. After the initial resistance, the officer reportedly submitted to due process, including proper screening and declaration procedures, after which he was eventually allowed to board the flight. However, the incident escalated beyond the airport terminal. Following the episode, the Nigerian military reportedly wrote an official letter to ValueJet Airlines, accusing the airline of disrespecting military personnel and demanding a formal apology from the carrier for stopping the officer from boarding with his weapon. SaharaReporters gathered that Lieutenant Yerima completely skipped standard passenger screening by entering the boarding terminal through the restricted military wing of the airport, rather than passing through the designated civilian security checkpoints. Aviation regulations require that all passengers—regardless of status—undergo screening before boarding commercial aircraft. Firearms, even when legally possessed, must be formally declared and handled under strict security protocols. Yet, according to sources, Yerima proceeded directly towards the aircraft with his pistol, in violation of these rules, until airline officials intervened. Industry insiders say the incident is far from isolated and reflects a recurring pattern at major Nigerian airports, where military personnel frequently refuse to subject themselves to standard boarding procedures. A senior ValueJet official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, told SaharaReporters that such incidents are common and often involve intimidation of airline staff. “This is the usual practice of military personnel. They refuse to subject themselves to boarding protocol and often threaten airline officials when asked to comply,” the source said. The official also admitted that airlines are not entirely blameless, revealing that some carriers, including ValueJet, have at times facilitated these breaches through protocol arrangements to avoid confrontation. “They send protocol officers to receive boarding passes on their behalf and go straight to board the flight, skipping all checks and going from the military wing of the airport straight to the aircraft,” the source disclosed. The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has also come under scrutiny for allegedly failing to address repeated complaints about such security breaches. Multiple sources told SaharaReporters that reports submitted to FAAN over similar incidents have gone unanswered, with the authority often accused of siding with military officers rather than enforcing aviation safety rules. In a recent incident at Port Harcourt International Airport, airline staff reportedly reported military personnel for violating boarding protocols. Instead of sanctioning the officers, FAAN allegedly reprimanded the airline, while the officers faced no consequences. Aviation experts warn that these practices pose grave security risks in a sector where uniform enforcement of rules is critical to passenger safety. Under NCAA regulations, all passengers must be screened, and restricted items such as firearms must follow strict declaration, storage, and handling procedures—even when carried by authorised personnel travelling in a civilian capacity. A source added that allowing any category of passengers to bypass checks undermines the entire aviation security framework and exposes aircraft, crew, and passengers to avoidable risks. Despite repeated incidents and growing concerns from industry insiders, there has been no public disciplinary action against offending officers or institutional reforms to end the practice. https://saharareporters.com/2026/01/31/naval-officer-yerima-known-confronting-fct-minister-wike-allegedly-bypasses-airport?utm_source=operamini&utm_medium=feednews&utm_campaign=operamini_feednews |
dollarnaira:Understand what? |
XMAS BONANZA Brand New 100amps Solar PWM Charge Controller. 5pcs available. 15k per piece. 12k if buying all. Location: Alimosho, Lagos. Whatsapp 08069096350 Serious buyers only
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The Directors of the Department of State Services (DSS) from the North-West, alongside their counterparts from the Federal Capital Territory, Niger and Plateau States, met in Kaduna on Thursday to review the current security situation and strengthen counter-terrorism measures across the region.https://politicsnigeria.com/just-in-we-will-defeat-terrorism-tinubu-responds-to-trumps-threat/
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The latest threat by former U.S. President Donald Trump to launch military action in Nigeria, allegedly to protect Christians, may sound appealing to some. Still, history has shown this to be perilous.https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1YsbZsW4RD/
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This is between Lanre bus stop and Oko filling bus stop along Lasu/Isheri Road, Igando. This is how it has always been every year. There is no drainage at all. And this is a federal road for that matter. |
Britishcoins:Bros abeg reply your DM |
SEPARATION IS NOT ABOUT WAR, IT HAS PEACEFUL ASPECT. In 1776, the USA split from the UK In 1830 Belgium separated from the Netherlands In 1965, Singapore split off from Malaysia in 2002, East Timor got split off from Indonesia In 1921, Ireland split off from the United Kingdom, and (possibly in the future) there will be secession of Scotland. In 1944, Iceland split from Denmark with remarkable ease. In 1905 Norway split from Denmark In 1905, Norway and Sweden also peacefully split ways. One got the car. the other got the kids. In 1947, the British India Dominion was partitioned into India n Pakistan. In 1971, Bangladesh secceeded from Pakistan. In 1992-93, the two parts of Czechoslovakia agreed to each go their own way. Thus were born the Czech Republic and Slovakia after what’s been named the “Velvet Divorce”., About the same time, another kind of separation occurred, of course, in Yugoslavia. This one led to a bloodshed. in 1965, Singapore split from Malaysia for a variety of reasons, including religious (Malaysia is majority Muslim, Singapore isn’t), ethnic/racial (Singapore has a very large majority Chinese population) and concerns over the Malaysian Bumiputra policy, which was (and is) basically a form of “Affirmative Action” for Muslim Malaysians – who make up the majority population in Peninsular Malaysia. Ethiopia and Eritrea Sudan and South Sudan are now separate countries USSR is now broken down into several countries. I see separation as an avenue for a healthy competition for development as the case of Singapore and Malaysia, India and Pakistan, Norway/Denmark/Switzerland. In the case of Nigeria, I am sensing a healthy competitive development among the original component part, the North/West/East each making useful progress while competing with the others. It is not about war after all there is nothing wrong for one to decide he is no longer comfortable with the union and therefore want to opt out. LETS GIVE PEACE A CHANCE AND SEPARATE HONORABLY. This is worth sharing over and over again… British named them Burma. They rejected it, restructured & renamed themselves Myanmar. -British named them Upper Volta, but they rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Burkina Faso – Land of Incorruptible People. -British named them Gold Coast, they rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Ghana. -British named them Southern Rhodesia. They rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Zimbabwe. -British named them Northern Rhodesia. They rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Zambia. -British named them Tanganyika. They rejected it, restructured & renamed themselves Tanzania. -Germans named them colony of South West Africa. They rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Namibia. -France named them Dahomey. They rejected it, restructured and renamed themselves Benin. -Belgium named them Zaire. However, they rejected it, restructured & renamed themselves Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). -Britain named a bunch of people – Nigeria. They rather kill to preserve it than restructure and give themselves a befitting new name. “It is only an animal that bears the name that is given to it by his enemy” (Proverb). THE FUTILITY OF PRESERVING NIGERIA My angry reaction earlier today on APC UK platform: Most of the Diasporans here living in Europe. Can you show me one multi-ethnic state in Europe where one group is positioned to dominate the rest that hasn’t broken up? For those who do not know, what you call ethnic groups in Nigeria are called nations in Europe. There’s nowhere in the world where the white man accepts domination from another white man in perpetuity. It used to be so under the Roman empire and the like. Not anymore. The Communists tried it, dividing society into capitalists and proletariats, deluding themselves that ethnicity is effectively swept under the carpet, but what followed? The Communist edifices in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and the big brother, USSR, all collapsed, while the two Germans that are ethnically the same but split by communism vs capitalism were reunited. Such is the power of ethnic nationalism. Czechoslovakia was made up of two ethnic groups, the Czech and the Slovakians. Both separated peacefully on 1st January 1993. The former is today 10.6 million people and the latter 5.4 million. Added together, they’re not up to Lagos. Yet, they split for peace. Two masters can’t be in the same house. Yugoslavia in 1991 was 23.2 million, barely more than Lagos population. It broke into six countries same year – all along ethnic lines, namely: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. Then the big brother, USSR. It had, at least, the following ethnic groups identified by their languages: Regional languages: Ukrainian Belarusian Uzbek Kazakh Georgian Azerbaijani Lithuanian Moldavian Latvian Kyrgyz Tajik Armenian Turkmen Estonian Minority languages: Abkhaz Bashkir Buryat Chechen Finnish Volga German Korean Ossetian Tatar & various others. Today, your fingers will not be enough to count the number of countries that have emerged from the USSR. Sit down there and be preaching unity in Nigeria as if you’re the kindest gentleman on earth while you have no solution to the genocide in Southern Kaduna, the illegal but officially condoned arms in the hands of killer herdsmen roaming the country, and be condemning those better informed about the fact that the country is undergoing the strains of a forced union and should be peacefully restructured or let people go their separate ways. In Europe, the two best examples of fairly stable multi-ethnic states are the UK and Switzerland. The former is led by reasonable men who permitted regional autonomy to the Irish, the Scots and the Welsh, while the English dominate Westminster. That’s something some of us are asking for, but you’re fighting against it in your own country wracked by ethnic crisis. Your own people are better off under oppression of fellow black men because your people have bad leaders who can’t do better than their new internal colonisers. The latter country, Switzerland, has four ethnic groups. Each of them rotates the presidency annually through seven cantons that constitute the federation units. All the four languages of the four ethnic groups are recognized as official languages and school languages to boot, namely: German, French, Italian, and Romansch that has just a few thousand speakers! There’s nowhere in the world where the Caucasians allow the domination of their group by another. In Canada, Quebec is the only full French-speaking province, aside a little section of New Brunswick. The other seven provinces are English-speaking. Yet, Canada is bilingual for the sake of Quebec! And each of the provinces is largely self-governing. Here we are in Nigeria, you have people arguing vehemently that a decrepit, structurally-flawed, and crisis-prone artificial contraption badly configured by the British only needs good people to survive. Why not centralise the powers of the British regions to London and see what happens? My Conclusion: When many commentators read and repost or share your articles with many of their friends and contacts, they do so because they want others to learn. NIGERIA’S 36 STATES & FCT RANKED IN ORDER OF LAND SURFACE AREA (KM²)* 1. Niger State 76,363KM² 2. Borno State 70,898KM² 3. Taraba State 54,473KM² 4. Kaduna State 46,053KM² 5. Bauchi State 45,837KM² 6. Yobe State 45,502KM² 7. Zamfara State 39,762KM² 8. Adamawa State 36,917KM² 9. Kwara State 36,825KM² 10. Kebbi State 36,800KM² 11. Benue State 34,059KM² 12. Plateau State 30,913KM² 13. Kogi State 29,833KM² 14. Oyo State 28,454KM² 15. Nasarawa State 27,117KM² 16. Sokoto State 25,973KM² 17. Katsina State 24,192KM² 18. Jigawa State 23,154KM² 19. Cross River State 20,156KM² 20. Kano State 20,131KM² 21. Gombe State 18,768KM² 22. Edo State 17,802KM² 23. Delta State 17,698KM² 24. Ogun State 16,762KM² 25. Ondo State 15,500KM² 26. Rivers State 11,077KM² 27. Bayelsa State 10,773KM² 28. Osun State 9,251KM² 29. Federal Capital Territory 7,315KM² 30. Enugu State 7,161KM² 31. Akwa Ibom State 7,081KM² 32. Ekiti State 6,353KM² 33. Abia State 6,320KM² 34. Ebonyi State 5,670KM² 35. Imo State 5,530KM² 36. Anambra State 4,844KM² 37. Lagos State 3,345KM² *Anambra + Enugu + Abia + Imo + Ebonyi = 29,525KM²* *Kogi = 29,833KM²* *Ogun + Oyo + Osun + Ondo + Ekiti = 76,320KM²* *Lagos = 3,345KM²* *Niger alone = 76,363KM²* *Niger State = Entire Southwest States – Lagos* *The entire Southeast is a little less than Kogi State only. Just for our record The North Has enough land for ranching and cattle colony. We in the South West have little land mass. PLEASE LET US BE; LEAVE US ALONE TO MANAGE THE LITTLE LAND WE HAVE *GLOBAL CATTLE BUSINESS: FACT SHEET* *A*. Top 10 NATIONS in terms of cattle inventory (2017). 1. INDIA 303 million 2. BRAZIL 226 million 3. CHINA 100 million. 4. USA 93 million. 5. EU 89 million. 6. ARGENTINA 53 million 7. AUSTRALIA 27 million 8. RUSSIA 18 million 9. MEXICO 16 million 10. TURKEY 14 million. *B*. TOP 10 MILK EXPORTERS 1. NEW ZEALAND $4.4 Billion 2. GERMANY $2.6 Billion 3. NETHERLANDS $1.9 Billion 4. FRANCE $1.5 Billion 5. USA $1.4 Billion 6. BELGIUM $1.2 Billion 7. AUSTRALIA $852 Million 8. BELARUS $637 Million 9. UK $569 Million 10. SAUDI ARABIA $556 Million *C*. TOP 10 BEEF EXPORTING NATIONS (2016). 1. AUSTRALIA $5.6 Billion 2. USA $5.2 Billion 3. BRAZIL $4.3 Billion 4. INDIA $3.7 Billion 5. NETHERLANDS $2.7 Billion 6. IRELAND $2 Billion 7. NEW ZEALAND $1.9 Billion 8. CANADA $1.5 Billion 9. URUGUAY $1.4 Billion 10. GERMANY $1.3 Billion *Additional Considerations*: 1. Nigeria is not among the top 20 nations in the global cattle business. 2. Non of the top cattle producing nations create cattle colonies or engage in primitive cattle grazing. All the top cattle producing and exporting nations utilise modern technology and ranching methods to maximise production and profit. 3. Non of the top nations earning billions of dollars annually from the cattle business condone the killing of citizens for cattle. 4. Nigeria’s cattle business requires a complete re-think now and not later, for posterity’s sake. _Knowledge_is_power,_ *Share to educate our leaders and citizens!* Mass Communication graduate and a fellow of Nigerian Union Of Journalists (NUJ) https://odunews.com/2021/06/if-us-and-uk-can-peacefully-split-why-cant-nigeria-aminu-saad-beli/
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Pro2makx:#1425 after removing the cost of the card . |
perp:Two deductions are always made. One is $1 to know d validity of d card u av just linked which is refunded instantly. Some banks will report it as failed transaction cos of d speed of refund. The 2nd is $1.9 (can be more or less). This is used to confirm or verify d ownership of d card or if u have access to the linked card. It is in this 2nd deduction that d code is attached to. Just check d msg alert sent by uba, d code will be included. |
yungsmart:100% possible. |
SolomonGrundy:It is your choice to wait for over a week to get it after application. If you had chosen to get it instantly, they would have done that. I applied for mine yesterday, collected it instantly, and linked to PayPal same day after changing my pin on their atm. |
vixetcollective:Wetin dem don share here free of charge many times |
Silverb:Madam plz what's the website? |
Does Africa have the need to continuously borrow Money for her today’s survival while creating debt-burden the next generations? The simplest answer that can be given is “it depends”, - but on what? In conventional economic theories, we are told that when a government prints money, it exposes itself to inflation because there will be more money in the system to chase fewer goods, causing the money to lose its value. However, if we can think beyond these theories, and accept the fact that these theories were developed by humans; individuals with brain capacities same as ours and we also have the capacity to device alternative models to solve our own problems, then, we can start to ask questions like: How can there be fewer goods in the system if the money printed is used as an incentive for innovation and production rather than serving as an object for demanding goods and services?; what is the central duty of a sovereign government when it prints paper and calls it money? What are the fundamental differences between monies printed into an economy and those borrowed into the same economy? Questions of these kinds can help us probe deeper to understand the system that controls us better. To a very large extent, when a government borrows money, it shows the lack of ability and understanding of that government to effectively manage the economy. Unfortunately, the idea of going to another sovereign country to borrow paper (fiat money) instead of using our sovereign status to print money and manage this printed money to support our developmental projects and programs has become the normal and easy way for almost all African countries since attaining independence status. Why should someone print paper and hand it over to you as money and let you pay back not with the same paper (paper, as used here, means what one has the right to print, in this case, if America prints dollar for us to support our economy, we should be able to print our own currencies to pay back after our economy has become stronger and not to pay back with the dollar which we do not have the right to print and as such, it becomes a value for us), instead, we are required to pay back these paper loans in values, resources, and efforts? I know it is not as simple as I am putting it in this piece, but the truth it is that it is also not as impossible as they make it looks to us. Before going further, it is important to point out that in an extreme distressing circumstance, a country may borrow money in a 1 or 2 cases (this happened to continental Europe, wherein, after the Second World War when America has to print and loan out money to Europe under the Marshall Plan to help them recover from the total breakdown). However, it is so not normal for a sovereign nation to resort to the borrowing of paper money as a way of life. In fact, no one has borrowed her way into freedom or development. At this stage, I want to point out, first and foremost that every sovereign state, no matter how small it may be, has the right and authority to print and manage its own money. Second, I want to state categorically that the act of printing money does NOT result in inflation (that concept is a hoax at least). Rather, it is the mode of management of the printed money that causes inflation or deflation. For example, if the government of Ghana (insert here the name of any African country of your choice) realises that a region/state needs a road and it estimates the cost of constructing the road to be 50 Billion Ghana Cedis (inset here the currency of your selected African country). If the government goes on to print 50 Billion Ghana Cedis for the purpose of this project and then calls on a Chinese or a European construction agency to construct this road on a condition that 20% of the capital cost is giving to the government or the political party in power as a kick-back, the following is what will happen: The Chinese or the European company will demand that the payment is made in Chinese Yuan or European Euro. This means the government of Ghana has to place the local currency it has printed on the international financial market to demand Yuan or Euro. When this happens, there will be more Cedi (than it should be) on the market and if there are not equally more customers on the market demanding for Cedi, then this automatically reduce the value or relevance of Cedi, hence drastic or continuous exchange rate depreciation of the Cedi. Once, the company pays the 20% of the capital cost to the government or party in power, it immunes itself of any system of control that is meant to regulate and manage the economy of the said African countries. In this case, the foreign construction company will construct a road with a quality far below what the money it has received should normally construct, it will under-pay local labour if it ever employs one, and it will invade taxes and all other statutory payments. The compositions of these negative actions will weaken the economic management regime of the said country. Additionally, it is important to consider that the 20% (paid in kickback) which has gone in the hands of the ruling gangs as a mere paper because they have received that without working, or exchanging any value for it. The effect from this is no different from the damage the economy will suffer when a criminal sits in his or her room and print counterfeit and release them in the economy. Yet this money will be cheerful release in our economy through unproductive and abusive channels such as paying for sex of, and rent for ‘slay queens’ and ‘Bleep boys’; sponsoring of political hooliganism to destroy lives and properties in our countries, and embarking on expensive holiday trips abroad and showing offs at public gathering and events. At the end of all the above scenarios, what will happen is that Ghana has used her sovereign status to print 50 billion in cash/paper but that 50 billion paper has not been properly managed to translate into /create actual wealth in equivalence of 50 billion. This, among many other negative economic consequences will result in inflation (more money in the system chasing fewer goods) because the focus of the money printed was to serve as an object for demand rather than being an incentive to induce production and innovation. It will also result in exchange rate depreciation and damaging of the country’s economic sovereign worth because no one can trust a system managing by ineffective heads. On the other hand, if the government prints 50 billion of the local currency for the purpose of constructing a road and this government ensures that the capacity of local construction companies are strengthened to execute the project, it will have no need to put such huge amount of the local currency on the global financial market for foreign exchange (because local companies are paid in local currency) to damage the exchange rate value of the local currency. Ethiopia has been able to develop strong local Construction, Banking, and Telecommunication system to champion the country’s development internally. Other African countries can learn from the Ethiopian system. In the event that 50 Billion is printed to embark on road construction, all that the governments have to do to avoid inflation is to internally manage this printed money to ensure that: It is fairly and widely distributed It translates into multiples of actual values and wealth in the economy Why is Fair and Widely Distribution of Printed Money Important? First of all, every member of a society has some potential(s) or value in them which when is encouraged and tapped, will contribute to national development. However, this value cannot just be tapped unless regimes of rewards and recognition are instituted as a modality of exchange for these inherent values in the citizens. After printing money, the government has a management duty to ensure that the money does not get concentrated in the hands of a few people; rather it must be wisely and widely distributed with an objective to use it as a bait to attract and uncover hidden potentials in citizens for national development. How can this be done? Whereas the main objectives of businesses owners will be to maximize profit, the government who has a duty to provide social good must at all times aim at maximizing quality and ensure that standards are strictly adhered to. When this is done, contractors are expected to spend the money received fairly on ‘all’ sectors of the economy to ensure widely and fairly distribution of the money. For example, by insisting on quality and adherence to standards, the construction of a single road can lead to: increase demand for general logistics; available capital for trading and operations of the banking sector; higher employment and welfare for citizens; and capital returns for government to embark on other project generated through efficient and transparent tax system and many other benefits to the economy. When the printed money is efficiently managed to inject the above benefits in the economy, the beneficiaries, will subsequently use and reuse the money/the benefits to create multiples of values (far higher than the original value of 50 billion) in the economy, thereby, promoting steady and long-term development of the country. Will Printing of Money rather than Borrowing be an Easy thing to do by any African Country? Certainly not, no single African country will find it easy to adopt this strategy; it even seems impossible because, lending to keeping Africa and her future in debt is a big business that helps those who want to keep Africans in an unending slavery use in controlling both the labour and human capital, and natural resources on the continent. By this, any country/leader that makes such an attempt will face strong sabotage, sanction, and likely power instability from the controllers of the system. Nonetheless, Africa will certainly win, when all or most African countries come together in unity and make this a continental policy. Without, doing this in unity, we must consider it that we are ready to bring our next generation into a new mode of slavery. (Copied) |
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lizzypro:Yes |
Fantastic |
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Nice write up |
This is fantabulous. |
Fantastic |
