BacktalkG's Posts
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OloshoMan:or the sake of manure fans ![]() |
that your family na class family abi you are from Jamaica |
bloody criminals they want to politicise it |
address the country or release one of his audio visuals |
fran6ixx:it kanawa |
kestolove95:pictures or I won't believe it |
guy go home u re drunk |
and they still have the guts to evacuate their citizens from Nigeria. white man and their superiority complex |
Chadian army is about to put Nigeria military out of business watch as northern politicians would mobilized zombies to protest killings of their blood thirsty brethren |
p |
same thing here oh op I was about to consult the oracles to know who sent me data because I have been flexing their 50 mb restricted data when my WhatsApp Facebook and other apps start working |
before is it yanshborn |
high time |
scoundrel:if you didn't see the humour pass |
The virus threatens to wipe out half of all jobs in Africa. Nearly half of all jobs in Africa could be lost because of the coronavirus, according to the United Nations. In a report released on Monday, the world body warned that the crisis would disproportionately affect developing countries in Africa and elsewhere, taking a toll on education, human rights, basic food security and nutrition. “This pandemic is a health crisis. But not just a health crisis. For vast swathes of the globe, the pandemic will leave deep, deep scars,” Achim Steiner, the administrator of the United Nations Development Program, which produced the report, said in a statement. “Without support from the international community, we risk a massive reversal of gains made over the last two decades, and an entire generation lost, if not in lives, then in rights, opportunities and dignity.” Among the developing nations named in the report were Bosnia, China, Djibouti, El Salvador, Eritrea, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Madagascar, Nigeria, Paraguay, Panama, Serbia, Ukraine and Vietnam. Overpopulation, poor waste management, pollution and traffic were all identified as factors that threatened a developing nation’s chances of recovering from a coronavirus outbreak. Leaders across the world have tried to balance economic concerns with the need to act swiftly to stop the spread of the virus. Iran has reported among the world’s highest numbers of Covid-19 cases and deaths , but President Hassan Rouhani has been severely criticized for not acting forcefully enough to fight the epidemic. And while the illness has been slow to take hold across Africa, the number of confirmed cases and deaths there have risen gradually, raising fears about the continent’s readiness to respond |
let them pack their Jew ass outa this country bloody terror peddlers |
I don't like brown sugar |
nice |
;DI don't know whether some people can not read or re just being plain stupid why derail this tread with account number |
[quote author=MrToothBrush post=87863972][/quote]guy you never tire? |
Rip to the dead. I can never join or encourage someone to join the Nigerian army they re sitting ducks whose life meant nothing to the government |
The end of the world as we know it is about to start indeed these are perilous times |
Kwanza:The end of the world as we know it, is about to start. this indeed are perilous times |
NwekeUG: |
[]Medicine after death |
at last egungu don enter express |
id911:guy u weak me |
Search for a vaccine becomes a global competition. (New York Times) A global arms race for a coronavirus vaccine is underway. In the three months since the virus began its deadly spread, China, Europe and the United States have all set off at a sprint to become the first to produce a vaccine. But while there is cooperation on many levels — including among companies that are ordinarily fierce competitors — hanging over the effort is the shadow of a nationalistic opportunity for the winner to potentially gain the upper hand in dealing with the economic and geostrategic fallout from the crisis. What began as a question of who would get the scientific accolades, the patents and ultimately the revenues from a successful vaccine is suddenly a broader issue of urgent national security. And behind the scramble is a harsh reality: Any new vaccine that proves potent against the coronavirus — clinical trials are underway in the United States, China and Europe already — is sure to be in short supply as governments try to ensure that their own people are the first in line. In China, 1,000 scientists are at work on a vaccine, and the issue has already been militarized: Researchers affiliated with the Academy of Military Medical Sciences have developed what is considered the nation’s front-runner candidate for success and is recruiting volunteers for clinical trials. President Trump has talked with pharmaceutical executives about making sure a vaccine is produced on American soil, to assure the United States controls its supplies. German government officials said they believed he tried to lure a German company, CureVac, to do its research and production, if it comes to that, in the United States. The company has denied it received a takeover offer, but its lead investor made clear there was some kind of approach |
