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club563@gmail.com |
club563@gmail.com
I'm interested in this manual please.
Thanks in advance. |
So, so impressed with the smooth business transaction that just took place now between me and naira2usd2naira. I got paid in less that 3 minutes. Please keep the honest business on and God bless you. |
Wow, Thank you sir hisenjos for the fast payment transfer. Though I was skeptical about doing this transaction, but you proved me wrong that there are still honest Nigerians in existence. The transaction was very fast and smooooooth. :-) |
Hi hisenjos, I just wanted to let you know that I received your email details and I'll forward the payoneer fund to you now. Hope we have a successful and mutually beneficial transaction. Keeping my fingers crossed. |
Firstly, I have nothing against Biafra and its secession struggle. While browsing online this morning (Tuesday, 01 December 2015) for news, I went to Punch Newspapers online portal (www.punchng.com) and noticed that their favicon (web masters will understand this) carries the flag of Biafra. Could that mean that Punch Newspaper openly supports the Biafra cause? Please check out the directions of the arrows on the top left side of the screenshot of today's Punch Newspaper (online).
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If you are a good wordpress expert and also very good with Thrive Visual Editor (a.k.a Thrive Content Editor). Please kindly get in touch. I have some tight workloads and I want someone here in Lagos to work or partner with me. Please if you are interested, please call me on 09021777878 (From 10.00am) Let's meet, have a drink and discuss. Thanks. |
Here is the Official Portrait of Governor Udom Emmanuel of Akwa Ibom State. A former banker turned Governor. Nice picture if I must say.
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Hi all Nairalander. I'm using this opportunity to wish everyone here on Nairaland and their families a very Merry Christmas and Happy and Blissful New Year. We shall all live to see the coming year and many more to come in good health and lots of cash in our pocket to celebrate. To Everyone, smile. 2015 will be a better year for the hustlers and for those that have "arrived", more blessings and achievements that will surpass the previous year. Please let's make this post the official for the Christmas and New Year greetings. Please you are free to greet each other below. Those having e-quarrels should sheath the e-swords and e-embrace in the spirit of the season. Regards, Anstel |
Two fraudsters, Tobechukwu Igbokwe (Alias David Prince)and his accomplice Ifeanyi Obi, who are alleged to have duped an America of $40million are to remain in prison until December 3, when Justice Lawal Akapo of the Lagos State High, Ikeja will open trial in their case. Justice Akapo had on Monday October 28 remanded the duo in prison custody after they were arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission on a 12- count charge bordering on forgery, conspiracy and obtaining money by false pretences contrary to section 8(a) and 1(3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act No 14 of 2006. Specifically, Mr. Igbokwe, a 19 year-old secondary school leaver, was alleged to have duped his victims, many of them foreigners, of huge amount of money through the internet, under fraudulent guises. He allegedly worked in concert with Mr. Obi to dupe an American, Micheal Silva, of $40 million in an inheritance scam. Mr. Silva was made to believe that Mr. Igbokwe and his accomplice had a huge inheritance which they wanted to move to a foreign account for safekeeping. The victim was asked to send money to “process” the transfer and in the process, he wired $40m in several installments through Western Union Transfer to Messrs Igbokwe and Obi. Mr. Igbokwe also confessed that he had duped other foreigners among them a Tommy Bedwell- who lost $6,000 to him and Richard Hunt-$15,000. One of the charges against Messrs Igbokwe and Obi reads: “Tobechukwu Igbokwe (alias David Prince) (alias John Emma) sometimes in the month of October 2011 at Lagos within the Ikeja Judicial Division with intent to defraud obtained $800 (Eight Hundreds Dollars),$700(Seven Hundred Dollars), $200(Two Hundred Dollars) $400(Four Hundred Dollars), $200(Two Hundred Dollars), $300(Three Hundred Dollars), $500(Five Hundred Dollars), $500(Five Hundered Dollars) $500(Five Hundred Dollars) $200(Two Hundred Dollars); totalling $5,500 (Five Thousand Five Hundred Dollars) which sum you obtained separately from Michael Silva of the United States of America under false pretence that the money represent part payment for processing inheritance funds due to him as a beneficiary of the fund and which pretence you knew was false”. When the charges were read to them, the defendants pleaded not guilty. EFCC counsel, Fadeke Giwa, prayed the court for a trial date and to remanded the accused persons in prison custody. However, counsel to the first defendant, D. A Omougbai asked for a short date to file his bail application. Also, counsel to the second defendant, D. A Eimuejel prayed the court to accept the bail application he filed on behalf of his client. Justice Akapo, however, adjourned the matter till December 3, 2013 and ordered that the defendants be remanded in Kirikiri Maximum Prison, Lagos. Wilson Uwujaren Head, Media and Publicity
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South African immigration officers sent back the Nigerians for not having valid hotel reservations. Eight Nigerians were Thursday deported from South Africa over various immigration illegalities. It is 8 A.M South African time Thursday, at the Johannesburg airport, and the boarding call for Arik Air W3104 was apace. But at Boarding Gate A2 of the airport, a drama ensued when a Nigerian who had just arrived the country was being forced on a return flight to Lagos, Nigeria. The young man who refused to disclose his identity was refused entry into the country because he had no documented hotel reservation. Yelling at the immigrations officers, he claimed he used his credit card in making the reservation, and for this reason cannot be refused entry into the country. Findings by PREMIUM TIMES however revealed that he wasn’t innocent and had indulged in such act before now. This was corroborated by a friend of his who was at the scene and identified himself simply as Okechukwu. He told PREMIUM TIMES that “he is fond of doing this. When we went to Australia, he used an expired credit card in booking his hotel reservation and it’s the same thing he has done again. It’s quite annoying seeing him arguing, lying and making this embarrassing scene”. The young man however threatened the immigration officers, insulting them and warning that “the president of my country must hear this. I’ll report you to him”. Nigerians at the scene retorted that he stopped embarrassing them with his “foolish act”. Consequently, security operatives were called upon to enforce the young man’s deportation to Nigeria via an Arik Airline flight W3104. Boarding for the flight, which ought to have commenced at 8.35a.m. was delayed as a result of the drama but it finally took off by 9 a.m. As part of immigration documentation, every visitor to South Africa must make a hotel reservation especially if the information supplied in obtaining the visa indicates the person is not going to stay with a relation and would be living with the person. If the visitor would be living with a relative or friend during the period of visit, there are certain documentations required as alternative to a hotel reservation. As a result of this, it is a general immigration rule that every airline boarding passengers to South Africa ensure that before boarding, their passengers have hotel reservations. Commentators on the increasing tense diplomatic relations between South Africa and Nigeria with respect to deportation of Nigerians told PREMIUM TIMES that the blame for this problem lie largely with the airlines, some of whose staff, engage in the shady dealings of ignoring to scrutinise the hotel documentation of passengers because they are in corrupt prior arrangement with such passengers. A staff of the airline in Lagos reportedly aided the young man and other passengers to travel without complete documents. In the stern enforcement protocols put in place now by the South Africans, any passenger any Nigerian passenger who arrives South Africa without complete documentation is sent back through the next available flight. If he is lucky to pass through immigrations without being caught, he stands being arrested if discovered during his stay in the country. Further information provided by the South African Immigration officers to PREMIUM TIMES as at 9 A.M. indicated that seven other Nigerians alongside the young man were also deported to Nigeria Thursday for similar reasons. [url] SOURCE: http://premiumtimesng.com/news/147628-south-africa-deports-eight-nigerians-invalid-documentation.html[/url]
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Fernando Torres is beginning to justify why he's earning that much. Let's just hope he continues like he's doing now, so that he could be removed from this list. Up Chelsea ![]() |
Here is the source : http://sports.myjoyonline.com/pages/news/201305/106751.php |
Here are the 10 most overpaid players in the English Premier League considering their current form and ability, ranked from lowest to highest paid per week. Read, weep and debate David Bentley, £50,000 P/W Let’s start off with a relatively measly £50,000 p/w, which is what Tottenham Hotspur’s David Bentley is currently earning, according to the Daily Mail. Yes, Bentley is still contracted to Spurs despite not having played for them in the last few seasons. For a mid-table Premier League star or a squad player at a top four club, perhaps a weekly wage of £50,000 wouldn’t be too big of an outrage, but for a player who’s been turning out at the Championship level (Blackburn Rovers most recently), it’s a travesty. We’d be surprised if Andre Villas-Boas kept him on this summer, but until the day he finally leaves White Hart Lane, Bentley is still one of the most overpaid players in the top flight. Here’s another outcast, though not to the extent that Bentley has been. Darren Bent - £65,000 P/W Darren Bent—who two years ago signed for Aston Villa for a whopping £24 million and was once considered the premier English goal-scorer—is now languishing on the sidelines at Villa Park and doesn’t appear to belong in Paul Lambert’s plans. All this while picking up a handy £65,000 every week, according to the Mirror. Not bad for the Bents, but a stumbling obstacle for the Villans, a team looking to offload the ex-England striker to free up their wage book this summer. [/b]Stephen Ireland - £80,000 P/W Oh yes, you read that right: Stephen Ireland earns £80,000 at Aston Villa, according Goal.com. The same Stephen Ireland who was supposed to become one of the league's most exciting goal-scoring midfielders during his time at Manchester City and was linked with another money-spinning move—this time to New York Red Bulls of MLS—last year, according to the same report. Ireland’s wages make him a top priority for a Villa Park exit this summer, so why would an MLS club, with their salary policies, take a chance on him? Not that Ireland himself would mind too much, of course. [b]Andy Carroll - £90,000 p/w Andy Carroll, the all-time most expensive British footballer ever at £35 million, has traded St. James’ Park for Anfield, and now for West Ham United’s Upton Park. Carroll, who might turn out to be a quite formidable England center-forward yet, is a textbook example of a square peg in a round hole. When Brendan Rodgers arrived at Liverpool to form a team in its historic pass-and-move mold, he quickly determined that Carroll just didn’t quite meet his requirements. So, a season in London and seven league goals on, he has the choice of moving to West Ham on a permanent deal, according to the Guardian. The mooted fee, £15 million, seems more reasonable than the £35 million Kenny Dalglish paid, and perhaps soon the Reds will rid themselves of the quite flabbergasting £90,000 p/w Carroll is currently on. Joleon Lescott - £90,000 p/w It’s not surprising that big wages are linked to big transfer fees, but it is most definitely surprising that Joleon Lescott once cost £22 million, according to BBC Sport. Lescott played a big part in Manchester City’s first ever Premier League title last season but has rightly been replaced by the precocious Matija Nastasic this term. He remains a solid defender for both club and country and, if he moves on this summer, will most likely remain in the top flight and would prove a good acquisition for his new club. He’d have to take a wage cut though—because at £90,000 a week, according to the Daily Mail, he’d find no suitors outside of his current club. Emmanuel Adebayor - £170,000 P/W Another player who had an impressive 2011-2012 campaign but has been off the boil this past season is Tottenham Hotspur’s Emmanuel Adebayor. After an exciting season on loan from City at White Hart Lane, Spurs went all out to secure his permanent signature last summer, at a transfer fee of around £5 million, according to the Telegraph. To facilitate the transfer, Adebayor reportedly had to take a considerable pay cut from his reported £170,000-a-week wages at the Etihad Stadium, with City offering a sizeable payoff to the Togolese striker. Not that £100,000 a week is worth the hassle, though. Especially for a return of five league goals all year. Ashley Young, £130,000 P/W When Manchester United won the race for Ashley Young for a reported £16 million, according to the Mirror, it was celebrated as a triumph over their club rivals Manchester City and Liverpool and a coup at a relatively modest amount for an exciting winger. There’s always a different story beneath the transfer fee, though. At £130,000 a week, Young has commanded at least £13 million in basic wages since his move to Old Trafford, and that’s not even including performance-based bonuses. But if he keeps performing at this season’s level, he won’t be in for too much of those. Samir Nasri, £170,000 P/W At the end of last season, after Manchester City won their first Premier League title, Samir Nasri immediately taunted his former club Arsenal by saying that he moved to the Etihad for sporting success, according to the Guardian. He was, of course, responding to jibes that he'd moved for the money, which wouldn't have been too surprising given that City doubled his wages to a whopping £170,000 per week. It must be said that in his maiden campaign in a City shirt, Nasri performed well and was a key player in the title-winning season. A year on, after being roundly criticized publicly by ex-manager Roberto Mancini, it certainly doesn't seem the case anymore. But with a considerable sum sitting in his bank account, Nasri will likely have the last laugh. Fernando Torres, £175,000 P/W At the end of the 2008-2009 season, when Liverpool finished second in the league, Fernando Torres' reputation was sky-high. A £50 million valuation wouldn't have been far off. A year and a half onward in January 2011, an injury-weakened Torres, who seemed slightly off-form during the first half of the season, was the subject of the same sizeable bid from Chelsea, and he was off. Torres' reported £175,000-a-week base salary, which excluded image rights and bonuses, according to ESPNFC, reflected how highly Roman Abramovich rated the Spanish striker. What transpired in the next few years is well-known. He might have turned in a better 2012-2013 season, but he still far from the Fernando Torres that we all saw in a Red shirt. Wayne Rooney, £250,000 P/W In October 2010, Manchester United's Wayne Rooney put in a transfer request, citing concerns over the club's squad strength, according to BBC Sport. It ended up resolving itself nicely, with Rooney signing a new contract just days after the transfer request and boosting his own wage package to £250,000 a week (Telegraph), but evidently then-manager Sir Alex Ferguson took heed of Rooney's worries. In the following few seasons, Ferguson continued to strengthen his squad, topping it off with the marquee capture of Arsenal's Robin van Persie last summer. The result? An off-form Rooney was demoted to the bench after the star signing overshadowed his previous importance to the team, naturally prompting yet another transfer request, according to Sky Sports. Irony at its best.
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With BlackBerry on life support, it’s time to accept the likelihood that there won’t be a BlackBerry a year from now. Your business will be in for a rude awakening if it relies on the once-mighty smartphone for mobile communication and productivity. You don’t need to abandon BlackBerry immediately and run for the lifeboats, but you do need to know what your options are. Here are five things you should start thinking about now in order to prepare for a transition away from BlackBerry. 1. If not BlackBerry, what? If you’ve built your entire mobile ecosystem around BlackBerry, the first issue you need to address is which mobile platform (or platforms) you should switch to if BlackBerry ceases to be an option. “Ownership matters,” says John Dasher, vice president of product marketing for Good Technology “Assuming your BlackBerry devices are company-owned, is your go-forward plan the same? Or is BYOD in your future? Or maybe a mixture of the two options? The answer here potentially affects your security model and deployment plan.” Take a step back and consider why your business uses BlackBerry devices. Which BlackBerry features or benefits are most important to your business or your users? With those considerations in mind, you can compare Android, iOS, and Windows Phone to determine which platform(s) can best meet your needs. 2. Mobile device management BlackBerry essentially invented the concept of mobile device management (MDM). BlackBerry Enterprise Server gives companies direct control over their mobile ecosystem, as well as the tools needed to provision, protect, and manage BlackBerry devices. BlackBerry is unique among the major mobile device manufacturers in offering its own proprietary ecosystem. Android, iOS, and Windows Phone devices, in contrast, rely on the wireless service providers—and companies that use them have to invest in and implement some sort of third-party MDM system to manage it all. If you want to switch from BlackBerry to Windows Phone, you’re on your own. But if you choose to migrate to iOS, Android, or both, BlackBerry can help. It offers its customers BlackBerry Mobile Fusion, which extends the familiar BES environment so that it can manage Android and iOS devices along with BlackBerry hardware. It’s not a permanent solution, but BlackBerry Mobile Fusion gives you a short-term means of transitioning from BlackBerry by attrition. Eventually, however, you may still need to migrate to a third-party MDM. 3. Secure messaging One hallmark of BlackBerry is BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), its messaging back end. BlackBerry built its reputation on reliable, secure mobile communications. If you’re transitioning from BlackBerry to another mobile platform, the role that BBM used to play for your business will be hard to fill. “BlackBerry is still the only cell phone provider that bypasses the carriers for messaging,” says Rob Enderle, principal analyst with Enderle Group. “Depending on Internet speed, you may be able to use an instant messaging technology, but it will need to be a secure form, the clients will need to be able to run the related software, and you’ll likely need a low-latency guarantee of service from your carrier to get this to work.” At first blush, Apple’s iMessage may look like a similar platform-specific messaging tool. But iMessage is essentially just SMS text messaging with a little extra Apple polish. BBM has much greater depth of features and is more secure, requiring users to do more than just provide someone’s phone number in order to connect and chat. BlackBerry intended to ease this transition by offering a BBM app for both iOS and Android. The app would have enabled an organization to begin switching to one or both of those platforms, while maintaining the security, reliability, and familiarity of BBM. The apps are currently on hold, however, following a botched launch that caused BlackBerry to pull the whole thing for the time being. 4. Data protection BlackBerry is synonymous with mobile security. BlackBerry customers are accustomed to end-to-end encryption out of the box and built-in data protection technologies to secure company data against unauthorized access. Android, iOS, and Windows Phone are—first and foremost—consumer devices. They can function as well as or better than BlackBerry mobile devices in many business and productivity roles, but they treat things like encryption and data protection more as options than as default features. As you assess your mobile platform options for replacing BlackBerry, consider how each handles the critical job of protecting data—both on the device itself and during its transfer across the airwaves. Make sure that the inherent security features and capabilities of the mobile platform you choose meet your needs, and confirm that your IT admin will be able to manage and enforce security policies on the mobile devices involved. 5. Alternative apps Good Technology’s Dasher stresses that apps are crucial, and should play a significant role in your choice of a mobile platform to replace BlackBerry. “Your BlackBerry is likely used for email, calendar and contacts. In the destination plan, think about the additional apps that are needed to ensure employee productivity.” List all of the BlackBerry apps you depend on: email, contacts, calendar, CRM (customer relationship management), VPN, and any others. Then determine whether those same apps are available on other mobile platforms. If they’re not, you’ll have to do additional research to find appropriate alternatives. If you plan to migrate by attrition, make sure that the alternative app can work alongside the BlackBerry app; and check to see whether you can integrate or transfer data from the old app to the new one to smooth the transition. Stay calm and carry on Harry Brelsford, founder of SMB Nation and a loyal supporter of BlackBerry, believes that businesses could use up to 24 months to plan and execute the next phase of their mobility strategy. He notes some potentially serious disruptions on the horizon, including how the Nokia/Microsoft deal will play out, and (of course) what company will acquire BlackBerry. The future is murky. “It’s one of those strange times in technology,” Brelsford says, “where we don’t know what we don’t know.” SOURCE: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2053348/five-things-you-must-do-to-prepare-for-the-end-of-blackberry.html#tk.nl_pcwbus
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Hi guys, you can get any HOT products from Clickbank from me at anytime. If you're interested, just send me a mail at tyrone@consultant.com containing the exact product you want and I get it asap for you. Even if the product is launched today. You can also reach me on 08052100532.
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Hi Nairalanders, please kindly call me for purchase of any softwares at very, very affordable prices. Please I do not sell pirated softwares or cracks but only authentic or original softwares. Browse the internet, check for any software of your choice you might be interested in buying and give me a call on 08052100532 and I'll get you the software at almost half the price. Guaranteed. My phone number is 08052100532 |
Hi guys, I came across this website www.shipryte.com They are into shipping of items purchased online from U.S, U.K, Dubai and China and they also purchase stuffs on behalf of clients. I think I want to try them out. |
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