peacefull: Hello! AlphaTaikun san! I'm so sorry for late reply to you.
Thank you so much for your kind words! I appreciate you!! In fact, I'm a ignorant person. But you made me feeling like I'm a wisdom person! Yeahhhh! \(*´∇`*)/ I really appreciate your kind!!
I'm very happy to heard about you enjoyed! Maybe some peoples think Japan or Japanese peoples are very weird or very strange
I think most of Japanese peoples including me still respect and love Emperor I thought especially elderly peoples before. But many young peoples too! Sadly, here have crazy peoples like anti Emperor group. Very disrespect peoples. Peoples can like or dislike Emperor. But they don't need to disrespect Emperor family
Really?! Japanese language is international language?! Wow!! I didn't know about that!
Oh! you can use Google translate to your Japanese friends! Most of times can understand Just little bit mistakes. Not only Japanese to English or English to Japanese? Maybe after few years from now will be getting more better than now!
Wow!! AlphaTaikun san is traveled many many countries?
That kind of things, electronic translator Japan have it. I have watched news about Japanese government give? rent? to Ukrain peoples who are evacuees in Japan.
Thank you so much for your kind! I really really appreciate you!!
Lol... No worries @Peacefull, you're not too late in replying.
Great to hear from you again. You gave some fantastic feedback here which shows that you do have current or up-to-date knowledge.
By the way, are you in the academic profession or something close to that?
Yeah, in every country, there are few non-conformists who don't like the monarchy even in a place like England, but the vast number do just like a large number of Japanese folks admire the mystique of Emperor Hirohito and the Japanese monarchy.
The Japanese language indeed is an international language because it is used in diplomatic circles and international business executives and tourists have to learn and use Japanese because Japan is a top global destination.
Okay, you're right... Google can still do translations but with a few errors though.
Wow! You're so spot on about the Ukrainians in Japan @Peacefull.
I have just read several Japan-based online newspapers that confirmed the gift of 1000 language translation devices to Ukrainians who relocated to Japan. That is so kind of the Japanese people to take in folks from Ukraine.
That translation device model given to the Ukrainians is one of those that I promised to show you in my last post to you on this thread.
So it's good you are already aware of this translation device's functionality. They come in different models and configurations so some models are better than others.
I'll still get back to you with more specifics from my prior research findings on multi-lingualism trends.
ultim: On the 28th July, I think it was the last Arik plane from Portharcourt to Abuja.
Mid air, turbulence was announced and shortly after that, the plane literarily dived to a dept that made the passenger quake and adjust for safety. They muttered different prayers and shortly after the plane continued smooth cruising, people were piling up to the plane's toilet. After landing at the airport, the Arrivals toilet was also filled up by same passengers.
A friend ( a pilot that flies private planes) sent text to me telling me that the pilot of that Arik plane told him that passengers didn't know that God saved them. That the plane was almost 'plucked' off the skies.
May we stay safe especially now that people avoid road transport
Air turbulences are quite regular, and I've been in a couple of them, but what you should pray NOT to have is wind shear. That can rip the plane right down to the ground due to sudden changes in pressure.
The Ethiopian Boeing 787 Dreamliner that crashed few years ago and the horendous Bellview airline that crashed violently cockpit first into the ground at Lisa in Ogun State in the 2000s did so because of wind shear!
Kennedyli: I have a female friend who's single. She's a good person, but I noticed an unusual closeness with this man, who happened to be married.
She says the man was just a friend from church and they had nothing going on. She said the wife was suspicious at first; but the husband explained to her and now they are fine.
However, I noticed that they call each other everyday; which was okay. I warned her to stop allowing the man call her, especially at night. Which she promised to work on.
I was trying to check something on her phone, when I noticed that not only was the man just calling her. She calls him close to midnight, sometimes, repeatedly until he picks.
My question is, can or should a lady have such relationship with a married man. Kind of a married man bestie who she go places with and calls in midnight?
Sure... ON THE PROFESSIONAL LEVEL, why NOT? If you set boundaries and don't allow your hormones to dominate you.
Midnight phone calls from a married male bestie to a pretty unmarried lady and vice versa... Then that gets more complicated.
Bbsharon: Great pictures, thanks for sharing. For the blog guess it’s a server problem because it’s opening at my end here. Thanks for the support always!!
'Dami you're welcome.
That's strange... but then server issues can cause the glitch situation as you've said. I'll check your blog again with another Internet Service Provider and device.
Second, I saw the "tired look" that you had on the 45-minutes flight from Lagos to Accra because of the Arik Air flight delay. Your return flight from Accra was yummy though with the Ghana jollof jumping right into your eyes.
You can get yourself an energy booster drink like Lucozade or even Glucose D drink the next time you plan to take a trip by air and even by road because delays and flight cancelations due to adverse weather condition and more are sometimes inevitable after doing all that you can to avoid that situation.
You'll find the article weblink right below (that I bookmarked some time ago) useful as well.
TRAVEL FATIGUE IS NOT JET LAG Often used interchangeably, there is a significant difference between travel fatigue and jet lag. While travel fatigue could be caused by any mode of transport, jet lag is related to aircraft and timezones.
Also known as time zone change syndrome, jet lag is when people travel across different time zones and end up disrupting their sleep cycle. This condition is seen related to circadian rhythm disorder and can lead to irritability, insomnia, and headaches.
Chizzychinny: Even Itsekiri understands Yoruba a bit
Yeah, the parent ethnic group of Itsekiri people is from Yorubaland. Ijebu, Ife, and Ilaje sub-groups from Yorubaland make up the larger component of Itsekiris. Then Prince Ginuwa also arrived with 70 of his subjects from Benin and settled among the itsekiris of Ijebu origin at Ode-Itsekiri in the 1490s.
Itsekiris and Igalas are the ONLY 2 ethnicities that are classified as Yoruboid, meaning the languages have strong similarities and histories with the core Yoruba language.
Abujason: The man told you that they find themselves closer to Igbo than Yoruba but you still want to claim them as you claimed the Aworis of Lagos. Okay ooo. Continue.
By the way, some of the Igala words that someone translated into Yoruba earlier sounds and mean the same in Igbo.
The Aworis of Lagos, Ogun and Benin Republic are pure Yorubas and have never denied being so. Go and get yourself educated before coming online NEXT TIME and find out the meaning of "Awo" as a pre-fix in Yoruba language. Awolowo, Awogboro, Awori, Awotunde, and more.
Just In : How Ooni Of Ife Hosts Awori People At Ife
The Awori is a tribe of the Yoruba people speaking a distinct dialect of the Yoruba language. And they are presently found in both Ogun State and Lagos State, Nigeria.27 Jun 2022
Second, the Igala Yoruboid words you see in Ibo language was introduced into Iboland by the Igalas [and Igala bloodlines exist in Anambra, Enugu, and Delta States] just like the red chieftaincy cap Ibos wear is NOT native to Ibos but was introduced by the Igalas into Nsukka area. It then spread to other parts of the Ibo area. The red cap is indigenous to the Middle-Belt of Nigeria. Even the Yorubas of Kwara and Kogi States wear the red chieftaincy caps.
Igala-associated communities also exist in places such as Nri, Umueri, Aguleri, Asaba, Illah, Nsuka and more.
scholes0: @OP look at it this way, the closeness btw the aboriginal Igalas (Akpoto) & Yoruba is ancestral. A result of both groups descending from the same ancestors in deep prehistory that is soo old that nobody recorded it. The relationship between Igala & Igbo you friend talks about is as a result of geographical closeness/inter-relationship along border areas & some culture rubbing off each other. There r even igalas in today's SE. So actually, depending on the Igala u ask, there are varying degrees of closeness with neighbors. Some Igalas will tell u they r closest to Agatu/Idoma, some will tell u it is Bassa-Nge/Nupe. These are all location induced relatedness.
Igala looks like heavily modified archaic Yoruba.
Many of the words are the same. For those that are not exactly the same, I observed the following changes/modifications.
1) I noticed keenly that they have evolved to replace nasal vowel (Añ, Eñ, Iñ, Oñ, Uñ Etc) endings in Yoruba with their open oral vowel equivalents. Because Yoruba has 7 oral and 7 nasal vowels... but seems Igala has only oral ones.
* And also some consonant mutation in Igala , i.e (R to L), (L to N), (J to Bÿ), (S to R/L) etc.... Here are some RULES:
Rule A*: Nasal vowel ending words in Yoruba to open vowel ending in Igala. Middle diphthong eliminated when present Jeuñ (eat) - Jeñwu Igbiñ (snail) - Igbi Ohuñ (thing) - Eñwu Eyiñ (tooth) - Eñyi Ọkuñ (illipede) - Ọkọ Eguñ (ancestors) - Egwu Oguñ (medicine) - Ogwu Fuñfuñ (white) - Fufu Fañ (blow) - Fa Agañ (barren) - Aga Kañ (sour) - Ka Okañ (one) - Oka Oduñ (year) - Odo Agbañ (chin) - Agba Ouñ (he/she/it) - Oñwu Ofuñ (throat) - Ofa Oyañ (breats) - Eñya Idiñ (maggot) - Ide Ekuñ (leopard) - Eko Tituñ (new) - Tito
Rule B* Consonant mutation R to L and vice versa Kekere (small) - Kekele Irawo (star) - Ilawo Iri (dew/mist) - eli Olu (lord) - Onu Ro (cultivate) - Lo Olamide (name) - Uramide Iru (seed) - ilu Akere (toad) - Akele Ra (buy) - La Erira (ants) - Elila Ri (see) - Li Ora (fat) - Ula Oruñgbe (thirst) - Olugbe
Rule C* Consonant mutation S to R/L Ese (leg) - Ere Eso (fruit) - Ero Se (block) - Re Sø (throw) - Rø
Rule D* Consonant mutation S and SH to CH It seems like the “Sh” sound in absent in some Igala dialects , and they replace with a 'CH'... These dialects that lack the the SH sound seem to have become the standard for the whole of Igala.
Other Minor differencess with irregular rules Bayii (like this) - Abayii Øbɛ (soup) - Øbø Owo (money) - Oko Wo (look) - Go Ijo (dance) - Ido Monamona (lightening) - Omamañya Oru (midnight) - Odu Eru (slave) -Adu Ehoro (rabbit) - Efolo Adiye (hen) - Ajuwe Akuko (coc.k) - Ayiko
And finally,False friend cognates Yo in Yoruba = Fully fed Yo in Igala = Plump / Fat
Du in Yoruba - To contest an object Du in Igala - To take an object
Oyuñ in Yoruba = Pregnancy Oyu in Igala = Fat
Ebo in Yoruba - Sacrifice Ebo in Igala - Deity
Edø in Yoruba = Liver Edø in Igala = Heart/Chest
Wewe in Yoruba = Pieces Uwewe in igala = Many
There are many countless words that are exactly the same in both languages and need no further elucidation, since we are focusing more on what has made the two languages different over time. That being said, there are many other words too that are very different... Hence the reason why Igala shares approximately only about 64% or so word cognates with the General Yoruba we speak. The 40% that do not align between both is already enough to make inter-comprehension between both very hard... The biggest chunk of non Yoruboid words in Igala is from the neighbouring Idoma according to some research.
With this, I would give a Yoruba - give or take 6 months to master this language under complete exposure like going to live in Idah or Dekina.
Yoruba is Igala Pro Max. Once you master the grammatical rule of thumb in the formula required to convert from one dialect gloss to the other gloss ... you will master the language sharply.
Very insightful @Scholes0. I read this 2017 interview with the late Attah Michael Oboni of Igala on how Igala people came into existence and how the migrants from Wukari came along River Benue and merged with Yorubas and Edos to a large extent to form Igala ethnicity/language. Yoruba bloodlines flow in the veins of Igalas hence Yorubas and Igalas are indeed related ancestrally. I also read that Ebiras and Igalas are also related from the same migratory stock from Wukari in present-day Taraba State of Nigeria.
eniade07: I was talking with a colleague an igala man from Kogi state, I later discovered during our conversation that most of their igala words are almost similar to yoruba words. Interestingly, the man told me that they're closer to the south eastern part of the country than the south west. I came across below quotation from wikipedia
"The Yoruba culture was originally an oral tradition, and the majority of Yoruba people are native speakers of the Yoruba language. The number of speakers is roughly estimated at about 30 million in 2010. Yoruba is classified within the Edekiri languages, and together with the isolate Igala, form the Yoruboid group of languages within what we now have as West Africa. Igala and Yoruba have important historical and cultural relationships. The languages of the two ethnic groups bear such a close resemblance that researchers such as Forde (1951) and Westermann and Bryan (1952) regarded Igala as a dialect of Yoruba"
"Also Igáláà is a Yoruboid language. It is spoken by the Igala ethnic group of Nigeria. In 1989 an estimated 800,000 spoke Igala, primarily in Kogi State, though current day estimates estimate upwards of 2 million Igala speakers. Dialects include Idah, Imane, Ankpa, Dekina, Ogugu, Ibaji and Ife. The Igala is related to Yoruba with which it shares a previous common ancestor, it remains unclear when both language split, mutual intelligibility in modern times is only marginal, although the sound/tonal systems remain the same, akin to the relationship between the various daughter languages of the Romance or Slavic language families. The Idoma and Bassa people use Igala in primary schools. The Igala language, as well as Igala culture and tradition, has influenced other languages and cultures around the confluence of the Niger and Benue rivers".
His Royal Majesty, Dr. Michael Idakwo Ameh Oboni, the Attah Igala, tells GBENGA ODOGUN about his life as the traditional ruler of the Igala.
Would you mind telling us the origin of the Igala people?
Talking about the origin of the Igala people, a sizeable group migrated from Wukari in Taraba State from where they came to Benue along the River Benue and continued very close to the confluence at a place called Amagede by River Benue and slightly down from Amagede downwards to Idah and they settled there. And there, they met a sizeable population of the Yorubas and the Benins and to some extent, some Igbo. So the migrant population from Wukari merged with them and produced a language called Igala as a people.
This is what is remaining (plus the ongoing iconic Marina Station)…. You can see the surface, that’s where the 2 set of tracks will be. This Blue Line Rail will run on Electric, Yes … ELECTRICITY ... An IPP is already being built for it around National Theatre.
That's awesome... Eko o ni baje... Lagos is now on positive steroids.
ArewaNorth: it would be ridiculous for me to feign being from one tribe and be spreading falsehood or propaganda. This article is born out of Daily Trust's investigation which I shared with members of the forum. Go to my previous posts amd comments to get the proof of my northern identity.
You misunderstood me. I know you are absolutely from the far North of Nigeria... and a true Dan Arewa. I have had a conversation with you before this year using an older moniker of mine on NL. The Daily Trust article is just an opinion but cannot be factual because a lot of Northerners live in Yorubaland and a lot of Yorubas live in the North and have adopted Northern or Hausa ways of life, especially members of the Muslim Ummah among the Yoruba folks who tend to blend in very well in the far North.
Some people who are enemies of Nigeria from among the terrorists could also be falsely spreading these false stories to poison the minds of Nigerians so they fight one another as a distraction so they can carry out their destabilisation of Nigeria.
It will interest you to know that in 2021, Amotekun Corp rescued Fulanis who were kidnapped by some fellow Fulanis in Ondo State and held for ransome payment. So some people may be spreading these lies to divide the peaceful business relationship that has existed between the Yorubas and far Northerners. Just my take.
LeoDeKing: One said the Letter Headed is not from ExxonMobil because her mother who was a cleaner on contract in the organisation never knew about it.
You, on their hand, are looking at the content of the document and have indeed said something about Tinubu's conduct, meaning it was from ExxonMobil. You and her can go argue the genuineness of the document.
As regards deceit, ExxonMobil said Tinubu is honest and intelligent. Something that can never be said of pandora hoebi.
Well said @LeoDeKing.
Mobil Nigeria is now known as ExxonMobil and the letter was typed on December 29, 1998. I wonder why these creeps are so SLOW in understanding. Is it too hard for these simpletons to understand that Mobil Nigeria of 1998 is now ExxonMobil of 2022 [after the merger of Mobil with Exxon Oil]. ExxonMobil Corporation, a U.S.-based oil and gas company was formed on November 30, 1999 through the merger of Exxon Corporation and Mobil Corporation.
Look at that female that you took on here and logically tore to pieces, saying that her mother used to go to Mobil Building for contracts, talking trash and calling the letter forged. She's one of the older members here on NL, but has allowed herself to lose her sense of reasoning through ethnic bigotry and hate. [despite living in Lagos and speaking the Yoruba language].
Bbsharon: Thanks for sharing!! Talking about the Nigeria Airways plane showed it’s really been a long time ago. And yes, the kotoka international Airport was renovated not too long ago
You're welcome 'Dami... Anytime.
I tried visiting your blog, but it wasn't opening and my Internet access is super-fast here... blazing speed of downloads and browsing is fast. Check on your end to make sure there are no glitches.
Yeah, the flight by the Nigeria Airways A310 to Kotoka Airport in 1987 was 35 years ago as of 2022.
Below is one of the two Airbus A310s [5N-AUF] I have ever flown on [In full majesty at Heathrow Airport].
sarrki: "Tinubu, a very honest hardworking man"- ExxonMobil
Not Mobil Filling Stations please
Very commendable... He worked at very senior levels for Mobil Nigeria [now ExxonMobil] from 1983 to 1992 after returning from the United States.
The letter was written on December 29, 1998 when Mobil Nigeria had NOT yet merged to become ExxonMobil. There are TRULY so many creeps online and offline who don't READ to UNDERSTAND.
ExxonMobil Corporation, a U.S.-based oil and gas company was formed on November 30, 1999 through the merger of Exxon Corporation and Mobil Corporation.
@ArewaNorth, you can see that this liar and criminal on NL in the attached screeshot here has been telling lies that he is a Northerner but he is Ibo from his past history of posts and has been trying to cause discontent and division between the Yoruba and the North.
Nobody from my deep investigations is profiling the North in Yorubaland. Only suspicious looking people are being checked just like Northerners are also profiling potential criminals in the Northern states too.
Beware of articles or those who want to cause ethnic divisions online and offline for political reasons.
Thanks to @9gerian for revealing this creeps real identity on page 2 of this thread.
Yeah, @Sukkot, I've finally found the thread or NL link to the article [by the U.S.-based Farooq Kperogi] that I talked about on your recent thread yesterday.
Bbsharon: In this video I shared my honest flight review using Airpeace Airline for my return trip to Accra from Lagos.
My flight was delayed for 3hours plus and it was a night flight so it was a frustrating experience having to stay in the airport for that long due to flight delays.
That's a great flight review as usual 'Dami. An insightful 13 minutes of viewing. Flight delays tend to take place on the West African routes that I have flown.
Only the best airlines that are time-efficient have always survive globally.
TheSourcerer: Cândido da Fonseca Galvão, also known as Oba II d’Africa (1845-1890) was a Brazilian man who fought in the War of the Triple Alliance (also called the Paraguayan War) and claimed to be the grandson of an African prince whose son had been brought to Brazil as a slave. Galvão himself was born a free man in Bahia, and enlisted in the military at a time when Black slavery was still legal in what was then the Empire of Brazil.
Galvão was the grandson of the powerful African prince Alafin Abiodun, who unified the Yoruba kingdom of Oyó in the late eighteenth century. Galvão’s father fought in the wars that raged in that region of Africa in the early nineteenth century, was captured in battle, and sold into slavery. He was then transported to Bahia. With the help of friends among the Yoruba community in Salvador, Galvão’s father quickly purchased his freedom. He then married and had children. As an offspring of freedpersons, Cândido Galvão was raised as a free black man near the town of Lençóis in the interior of Bahia.
Dom Obá II considered it his duty to fight for his country in the war against Paraguay. “As the patriotic soldier that I am, I understand that I have only been doing my duty in taking an active part in all the matters that I understand to be grave.” Enlisting as a Voluntário in the all-black Zuavo company that departed from Lençóis on May 1865, Galvão remained at the front until wounded in his right hand in August 1866. After his return to Bahia, where he remained through the decade of the 1870s, Galvão petitioned government officials for recognition of his service during the war and for monetary compensation. His experience in Paraguay inspired his commitment to ending slavery in Brazil and his pride in being a black man.
Galvão settled in Rio de Janeiro in 1880, where he gained renown. The wealthy considered him a “disturbed veteran” (uma espécie de veterano resmungão) and “folkloric aberration” due to his outspokenness and appearance in attire that included a long black morning coat, tall hat, gloves, umbrella, and walking cane. An activist of the first order, Galvão met personally with the Emperor [Pedro II of Brazil] 125 at public meetings from June 1882 to December 1884! Dom Obá garnered great respect among “the Blacks and the Browns” (the terms commonly used by Galvão) residing in the city. Slaves, freedpersons, and free persons of color all provided financial support that enabled the prince to publish articles in newspapers. In his writings, Galvão praised the contributions of black and brown soldiers during the Paraguayan war, condemned the racism he witnessed in Brazil, and called for an end to slavery.
Yeah, the Brazilian-born Yoruba Prince, Candido Galvao was the grandson of Alaafin Abiodun, the Yoruba Emperor of the great Oyo Empire with the seat of power in Western Nigeria who ruled in the late 1700s.
TheSourcerer: Martiniano Eliseu do Bomfim Yoruba name was Òjélàdé, (1859-1943), was born in Bahia, Brazil. His father was a member of the Egba, one of the Yoruba sub-groups, had been brought to Brazil as a slave in 1820 and liberated there in 1842. A 16-year-old Martiniano accompanied his father, Eliseu do Bomfim, who was an import/export trader of Yoruba goods, on a trip from Salvador, Bahia to Lagos, Yorubaland in 1875 for the purpose of attending school and learning a trade. In Lagos he attended the Church Missionary Society Alápákó Fàájì School for almost 11 years. He arrived back in Salvador on January 30, 1886. During his time in Lagos Martiniano became fluent not only in English but also in Yoruba. He also acquired knowledge of Ifá, the Yoruba system of divination and became a Babalawo, as well as being trained as a bricklayer and house painter. Back in Bahia he worked as an English teacher for well to do Afro-Brazilians. Martiniano died on November 1, 1943 in Salvador, Bahia. Photo: 1937
An awesome history of the Yorubas in Bahia, Brazil. A triumph of the human spirit.
Onajevwe: Same here Bro. There are times I stay awake till 4 or 5am. This unemployment issue is burning me out seriously. I only sleep well if I take enough alcohol in the evening. I'm almost becoming an "Ogogoro Junkie".
Onajevwe: Yes. Any job infact. I need to be able to keep my body, soul and spirit together. Right now, my Soul is in Madagascar while my Spirit in in Bolivia. My empty body is what's left in Nigeria. I need to bring my Spirit and My Soul back.
Onajevwe: Yes. Any job infact. I need to be able to keep my body, soul and spirit together. Right now, my Soul is in Madagascar while my Spirit in in Bolivia. My empty body is what's left in Nigeria. I need to bring my Spirit and My Soul back.
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Bbsharon: Good to have you here!! Have you been on this route before using Airpeace or at the Kotoka international Airport Accra at any point in time? Kindly share your experience. Thanks for your comment…
Wow! This thread brings back memories for me 'Dami.
My first trip ever into Kotoka International Airport was in 1987 via one of the 4 brand new Nigeria Airways wide-bodied Airbus A310 planes. We were originally flying from MMIA, Ikeja, Lagos to the very well-planned and beautiful city of Abidjan in Cote d'Ivoire for an international conference at Hotel Ivoire [where the iconic pop legend Michael Jackson stayed during his 1986 visit to that country].
The Airbus plane first landed smoothly at Kotoka Airport, Accra which had about 3 disused or crashed planes littered around and it felt good to be in that huge Nigeria Airways A310 plane [as a person of Nigerian descent] when compared to other smaller passenger planes parked on the tarmac.
We then flew off again onboard the Airbus A310 from Kotoka Airport, Accra for the nearby city of Abidjan [Félix Houphouët-Boigny International Airport], in Cote d'Ivoire after spending close to one hour at Kotoka Airport.
The new Kotoka International Airport Terminals as of 2022 are more functional and modern than the Kotoka Airport of 1987.
Safe Trips.
Ciao.
Attached below is an image of a Nigeria Airways Airbus A310. [One of the four ever purchased directly from the Airbus factory in 1985].
mimathom: Hi, yes you can travel without a passport. All you need would be a means of ID card, i would say the best means of going to ghana after Air travel would be to use GUO transport( they are based at isolo area). They are fast and reliable...you'll be surprised the time you'll arrive there, if lagos traffic doesn't hinder you.
NOTE: You would pay more as you dont have a passport, but whatever they say, negociate(How much last)
**A fellow Ghananian living in Nigerian speaking**
belloabeebb: That's his pictures, he claims he lives in the UK, I did video call with him yesterday, he's Lodge in one hotel in Nigeria, scamming innocent people. His account details 0082626193/Union / Nicky nwankwo and the number he use for scam: +234 816 893 2604... His partner, the white guy's number: +352 621 689 007 his name is mr Jani Daniel
Lol... Sussed out big time.
Yeah, that's the creep whose picture was on the BritishNaija profile on NL. I remember this dude showing off his long finger nails on his NL profile and the convo he had with @Romanoff on her well-manicured finger nails in July 2022.
@1stGenAmerican, now you know what has happened to this guy who you were following via your NL profile. He got sussed out for scamming and/or attempting to scam some folks here via some foreign travels and employment schemes. He then deativated sometime in August 2022.
My intuition (B.S. detector) made me know he was dodgy (with those long finger nails of his) within the first two days of first seeing him. "Due diligence" is the key phrase here.
He has to be made to face the law ASAP with his so-called white accomplice.