SOMEONE SHOULD PLEASE EXPLAIN THIS TO ME I WANT TO CERTIFY MY DOCUMENTS FOR ADMISSION, I LIVE IN BAYELSA NO GERMAN EMBASSY HERE AM LOOKING FOR ALTERNATIVE I WANTED TO GO COURT OF APPEAL HERE
the university said my school documents...
must bare a stamp, signature and an official seal and may be obtained from a German Embassy, a notary, or local authorities in Germany or in your home country. Notarizations by insurance or finance companies, post offices, banks, military officers or similar will not be accepted.
kahal29: In my honest opinion I think it portends great danger for our democracy. Infact, It will take a miracle from now on to prove election rigging through the courts because a judicial precedence has been set and reference would always be made to these cases in future. Take for instance the issue of proving overvoting/rigging through polling unit by polling unit and calling witnesses in each of the polling units....... Who can achieve this in 180 days at the tribunal? And that is my fear..... Though these judgements have favoured some people now in the short run however Nigerians will be the biggest losers at the end of the day because I trust our politicians to use this judgement to their maximum advantage in future. It's now business as usual since card readers are no longer relevant.
ogagaejay: I meant some persons who used sponsorship letter from other EU states. I think the issue is the bank. The bank most be operational in Germany. In all case, you can always turn to the embassy for first-hand information
Thanks for this info bro
I need to find out
I have so many people in UK, Switzerland and Italy
ValerianSteel: Why the fvck are you Nigerians threatened by a harmless minority?So much unjustified hate towards gays and ignorant pathetic attitudes and opinion on homosexuality.
mazeltov: America, under Obama's administration is pursuing a goal of nuclear warheads reduction with Russia under '' START- TREATY''. So it doesn't make sense when these two world power are scrapping their nuclear arsenal for a safer world and another country will be pursuing goal of producing weapons of mass destruction. Us is not afraid of anybody or any country with nuclear weapons. Us was the first country to develop and use Hydrogen bomb on November 1, 1952 at Elugelab Atoll in the Pacific and Us have such bombs in stock. Count it, that is how many decades ago? What is the population of North Korea? American doesn't need to even get involved, all they need to do is to arm South korea and Japan to do the dirty job. Even if North Korea develops Hydrogen bomb (which I don't believe') , the last thing they would do is to use it against any Nato member state talkless of United State. Come on!! What are we even talking about.
Is either you are a lier or you completely ignorant
Obama or Russian isn't trying to reduce nuclear weapon
Last year Obama administration initiated a program
A trillion dollar program of modernization of the nuclear weapon system
Which mean he is expanding the nuclear weapon system in fact that is the reason why the Famous Doom Day Clock of the bullet m America scientists has been pushed 2 minutes closer to midnight
Midnight is the end, is now 3 minutes from midnight the doom hour.
The westerners can keep living in dillusion that bomb is hydrogen bomb
western nations are not the only one licensed to own nuclear weapon
I say congratulations to the DPRK
I wish Nigeria was the one that detonate that bomb america will not come here and preach gay law to us.
Exxit: hello guys here are 13 brutal fact the north Korean government don't want us to know.
1. No Freedom of Movement
It is illegal for the North Korean people to leave their country without the regime’s permission, and the regime attempts to restrict the people’s movement even inside their own country. If you wish to travel to another part of the country, you are supposed to have a specific purpose and obtain permission from your work unit. If you do not live in Pyongyang, the showcase capital where most resources are concentrated, you will likely be denied access. The regime has also forcibly relocated hundreds of thousands of North Koreans to less favorable parts of the country as a form of punishment and political persecution.
2. No Freedom of Speech
Criticism of the regime or the leadership in North Korea, if reported, is enough to make you and your family ‘disappear’ from society and end up in a political prison camp. It goes without saying that there is no free media inside the country. The only opinion allowed to be voiced inside the country is the regime’s.
3.No Religious Freedom
Organized religion is seen as a potential threat to the regime and therefore nothing apart from token churches built as a facade of religious freedom for foreign visitors are allowed. Thousands of Buddhists and Christians have been purged and persecuted throughout the history of North Korea. People caught practicing or spreading religion in secret are punished extremely harshly, including by public execution or being sent to political prison camps.
4. Chronic Food Shortages
The regime’s refusal to effectively reform its failed agricultural policies, combined with susceptibility to adverse climate conditions (made worse by environmental mismanagement), and an inability to purchase necessary agricultural inputs or food imports mean that the North Korean people have faced food shortages ever since the 1990s. Millions of malnourished children and babies, pregnant women and nursing mothers bear the brunt of the shortages today. This has left an entire generation of North Koreans with stunted growth and a higher susceptibility to health problems.
5. Dismal Public Health
The regime claims that it provides universal health care to its people. In reality, the majority of the public healthcare system collapsed in the 1990s, with only prioritized hospitals in areas such as Pyongyang kept functioning. Elsewhere, health services and medicine are only available to those that can afford it. Ordinary North Koreans are therefore afflicted by easily preventable or curable poverty-related diseases, such as tuberculosis and cataracts.
6. Songbun Political Apartheid System
The North Korean regime has invested an incredible amount of time and resources creating the songbun system, a form of political apartheid that ascribes you with a level of perceived political loyalty based on your family background. Your particular songbun level (there are 51 of them) can then restrict your life opportunities, including where you can live, educational opportunities, Party membership, military service, occupation, and treatment by the criminal justice system. Any perceived political infractions by your family will lead to your songbun being demoted. For more, see this blog post.
7. Political Prison Camps
Five political prison camps hold an estimated 80,000 to 120,000 people. Some of them are the size of cities, and they have existed five times as long as the Nazi concentration camps and twice as long as the Soviet Gulags. Many people imprisoned in these camps were not guilty of any crime, but were related to someone who supposedly committed a political crime. Often they have no idea what that crime was, and even children who are born in the camps are raised as prisoners because their ‘blood is guilty’. Forced labor, brutal beatings, and death are commonplace. The regime denies the existence of these camps, but multiple survivor testimonies have been corroborated by former guards as well as satellite images.
8. Collective Punishment
In North Korea, if your relative is persecuted for “anti-state” or “anti-socialist” crimes, then you and three generations of your family can be punished for it. The aim is to remove from society the whole family unit to prevent any dissent from emerging in the future, and also to deter martyrs who might sacrifice themselves for a political cause but would not want to sacrifice their whole family.
9. Public Executions
The North Korean regime publicly executes citizens who have been accused of a variety of crimes, including petty theft. Whole communities, including children, are brought out to watch these executions, which are designed to instill fear amongst the people of doing anything that could be seen as against the regime’s wishes.
10. Refugee Crisis
The North Korean regime makes it illegal to leave the country without state permission, but every year thousands of North Koreans still risk their lives to escape a combination of a lack of freedoms and economic hardship; in North Korea these are inextricably linked. If caught trying to escape, or if caught in China and sent back, they are at risk of harsh punishments including brutal beatings, forced labor, forced abortions, torture, and internment in a political prison camp. Those suspected of having had contact with South Koreans or Christians while in China receive the most severe punishments.
North Korean refugees’ well-founded fear of persecution if repatriated means that they should be protected under international refugee law. However, the Chinese government prioritizes its political relationship with Pyongyang and does not recognize them as refugees. Instead they label them as “economic migrants” in an attempt to justify the forcible repatriation of thousands of North Korean refugees every year.
Since coming to power, the Kim Jong-un leadership has cooperated with the Chinese authorities to tighten border security. Recent defectors have told us of increased physical border security, increased risk associated with bribing border guards, and heightened punishments for people trying to escape. As a result, the number of refugees managing to arrive in South Korea has decreased by almost half.
11. Refugee Exploitation
There are currently an estimated 30,000-50,000 North Korean refugees in China, living in a precarious and sometimes desperate situation. They fear harsh punishment or even death if they are caught and sent back to North Korea, but many do not have the resources or contacts to get themselves out of China. Their illegal status forces them to work in invisible industries and leaves them vulnerable to exploitation by unscrupulous employers and sex traffickers, as they have no recourse to any authorities. Click here to learn about our work with refugees.
12. Sex Trafficking
Many North Korean women who escape North Korea become victims of sex trafficking. China’s lack of marriageable women, especially in the rural areas of its Northeast provinces, creates a demand for North Korean women who are at risk of being forced to work in brothels or online sex chat-rooms, or are bought and sold as wives. North Korean women have been sold for as little as a few hundred to a few thousands dollars in China.
13. Stateless Children
Children born to North Korean refugee mothers and Chinese fathers can face difficulties obtaining hukou (household registration papers) because of their mother’s illegal status. This can leave the children stateless, recognized by neither the Chinese or North Korean governments, and denied basic rights such as access to education and other state services. There are estimated to be around 10,000 children born to North Korean refugee mothers in China.
What makes you think democracy is the best system of government
Every country must not practice democracy, people tend to adopt the system of government that best suit them....this is what the westerners failed to understand
That democracy is working for them doesn't mean it will work for others
Look at iraqi if you want to be a terrorist go to iraqi, it wasnt like this when sada musein was incharged. Ye he is a bad guy agree But he was executing terrorists on daily bases he understand his own people
Libya is a failed state now....a country that once had the best economy in Africa is now the head quarter of Isis
It is not everyone that choose to be slave like Africa
I think Nork Korea is doing well with their own unique system of government
They re economically and technologically more advanced than so many western countries and your country nigeria
allthingsgood: This has to be the worst most useless country on d face of d planet! Testing bomb when 90% of your population are malnourished and in deep poverty! Smh
You bloody lier Support your claim with evidence
Is your country more develop or technologically advanced than north Korea?
efficiencie: Reading the comments of some sons and daughters of Belial here, gives me the creeps...
Is it a crime to be in a need and ask for help?
Many of the sons and daughters of Belial here will groan for help at the first sign of trouble and would be disappointed at those taking advantage of their disadvantaged position. Hypocrites!
...and I pray that in this year 2016, any man or woman, boy or girl or hermaphrodite born of a woman who have chosen to use their money, wealth and power to destroy the life of others who are in need, oppression will not cease in their life and into mischief will they continually fall till they perish out of existence if they remain hardened and unrepentant...
Proverbs 28:27 He that giveth unto the poor shall not lack: but he that hideth his eyes shall have many a curse.
No not a crime
She should go and ask her same sex for help not oppoiste
1corinthians 14:34 "let your woman keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak, but they are commanded to be under obedience as also saith the law".
1Timothy 2:9 "likewise, I want women to adore themselves with proper clothing, modestly and discreetly, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly garments. "