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Who Are Nairamart24 www.nairamart24.com.ng a Largest Classified Listing Marketplace offers perfect advertising products of all kind online. Also help you to sell your products and can also buy available products through the platform What they Do] Our marketplace makes it suitable for buying and selling activities and we offer sellers affordable ad promotion services to make quality goods and services appear on top of the listing page also gives the buyer best recommendations with related ads. Below are tips on how to buy or sell, place your advert on nairamart24 Create Account Create an easy seller/advertiser account to get started Post your Ad Post your products, services etc Get Offers Get notification from buyers as soon as possible Sell Your Item Negotiate with buyer/client on products and service |
Who Are Nairamart24 www.nairamart24.com.ng a Largest Classified Listing Marketplace offers perfect advertising products of all kind online. Also help you to sell your products and can also buy available products through the platform What they Do] Our marketplace makes it suitable for buying and selling activities and we offer sellers affordable ad promotion services to make quality goods and services appear on top of the listing page also gives the buyer best recommendations with related ads. Below are tips on how to buy or sell, place your advert on nairamart24 Create Account Create an easy seller/advertiser account to get started Post your Ad Post your products, services etc Get Offers Get notification from buyers as soon as possible Sell Your Item Negotiate with buyer/client on products and service |
Who Are Nairamart24 www.nairamart24.com.ng a Largest Classified Listing Marketplace offers perfect advertising products of all kind online. Also help you to sell your products and can also buy available products through the platform What they Do] Our marketplace makes it suitable for buying and selling activities and we offer sellers affordable ad promotion services to make quality goods and services appear on top of the listing page also gives the buyer best recommendations with related ads. Below are tips on how to buy or sell, place your advert on nairamart24 Create Account Create an easy seller/advertiser account to get started Post your Ad Post your products, services etc Get Offers Get notification from buyers as soon as possible Sell Your Item Negotiate with buyer/client on products and service |
Who Are Nairamart24 www.nairamart24.com.ng a Largest Classified Listing Marketplace offers perfect advertising products of all kind online. Also help you to sell your products and can also buy available products through the platform What they Do] Our marketplace makes it suitable for buying and selling activities and we offer sellers affordable ad promotion services to make quality goods and services appear on top of the listing page also gives the buyer best recommendations with related ads. Below are tips on how to buy or sell, place your advert on nairamart24 Create Account Create an easy seller/advertiser account to get started Post your Ad Post your products, services etc Get Offers Get notification from buyers as soon as possible Sell Your Item Negotiate with buyer/client on products and service
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Nairamart24 is designed to make selling easier. Via their classified selling categories, you can select your desired categories and market your commodity, goods, apartments, lands, properties, cars and many more. We also offer you the best rent ads placement that enable you to make your lease services visible to the world. below are tips on how to sell or place your advert on nairamart24. HOW TO SELL OR PLACE ADS ON NAIRAMART24 Goto www.Nairamart24.com.ng Tap the pink sell button at the top. If you don’t have an account, you will be redirected to create one. Select a category and sub-categories Add a title and price, and description of the Item/Services Tap Add photos to include photos from your device (phone/laptop/desktop/tablet etc) or take a new photo using your device camera. Tap Submit button below the page to publish your Marketplace listing. |
In a nutshell Nairamart24.com.ng is an online marketplace that connect buyers and sellers of different goods and services from different locations |
Nairamart24 is an online marketplace where you can buy and sell anything online: new and used cars, phones, fashion clothing and shoes, electronics, houses and more. You can even find or post job vacancies |
It simple |
Nairamart24 is designed to make selling easier. Via their classified selling categories, you can select your desired categories and market your commodity, goods, apartments, lands, properties, cars and many more. We also offer you the best rent ads placement that enable you to make your lease services visible to the world. below are tips on how to sell or place your advert on nairamart24. HOW TO SELL OR PLACE ADS ON NAIRAMART24 Goto www.Nairamart24.com.ng Tap the pink sell button at the top. If you don’t have an account, you will be redirected to create one. Select a category and sub-categories Add a title and price, and description of the Item/Services Tap Add photos to include photos from your device (phone/laptop/desktop/tablet etc) or take a new photo using your device camera. Tap Submit button below the page to publish your Marketplace listing.
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Mr Bill Gates has through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation committed at least $1.75 billion to the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In this interview with selected journalists from across Africa, the billionaire, who stepped down as chairman of Microsoft Corp in 2014, shares insights on the impact of COVID-19 on the world, the current status of the global fight against the virus and how partners can support countries in Africa and elsewhere to ensure an equitable global response. You’ve talked before about the dangers of a vaccine grab, and yet this is exactly what we’re seeing unfold. Could you share your assessment of the impact the rush for this vaccine is going to have on Africa? Well, the key for the vaccines is getting more approved and getting more factories into production. A lot of the work that the foundation has done is to back a variety of vaccines. Back in 2015 in my TED talk, I talked about the risk of a pandemic, and how we weren’t prepared. At that time, not much was done. The foundation, Wellcome Trust, the UK, Japan and Norway did create a group called CEPI, which has helped a lot with a number of these vaccines. With medicines, we always have this challenge with the big markets, the sales opportunities are in the rich countries. That’s why for diseases like HIV or malaria, the foundation reaches out to these companies and says, “We need to have some equitable approach.” The first two vaccines that were approved are fairly costly to make and hard to scale up. They’re very good vaccines, Pfizer and Moderna, but it’s the next three, including AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Novavax that will give us the highest volumes, the ease of scaling and the thermal stability. And so, we’re hopeful that, particularly with some factories in India, that the foundation has helped to finance, which have larger factories than the factories in the West, within the next few months a large number of doses will come out of there and be targeted almost entirely at the developing world, which is the goal of what we call COVAX. It’s a dynamic situation, I’ve been talking with governments and companies about this going back to last March, and so we have a chance here to get a lot of vaccines. In Africa, the epidemic itself in a direct sense has been worse in South Africa. The rest of Africa, with a few exceptions, hasn’t been super bad. But of course, the economic effects are there and any life that’s lost is really terrible. So we need to first get the 20% coverage, and then move to 70 to 80% coverage and I’d say the foundation is at the forefront of that but it’s still unclear how well all these efforts will go. Is there a plan for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to assist poorer countries in developing COVID-19 vaccine production capacity? There are a very high-volume of factories in the developing world, primarily in Indonesia and India. Making a new vaccine factory is a more than five-year effort. Definitely, to be ready for the next pandemic, I think that there will be factories using this mRNA approach, that are put in multiple places in Africa so you’ll have guaranteed quick supply. For this epidemic, we need to take advantage of the large capacity that people like Serum, BioE, and many others have, which are the developing world manufacturers who can in volume, make four to five times as many vaccines as all the Western companies put together. So, the factories really are there. We can’t get new ones overnight but these highly scalable vaccine constructs, the next three, the numbers can be very large. As soon as that can happen, the best. Until the vaccines reach everyone, new clusters of the disease will keep popping up. Last December, The Economist, projected that the vaccine will be widely available in Africa in 2022 or 2023. What can be done to improve the supply? Well, the agreement we have with India is that those factories, at least half the capacity, will be dedicated to supply, through GAVI, to Africa and other developing countries. Every day, of course, we’re trying to speed this up. The history of vaccines is that until GAVI was created in the year 2000, the really key vaccines for saving literally millions of lives were not cheap enough for the poor countries, and the coverage levels were very low. And so GAVI deserves more visibility for what it did, funded by many governments and our foundation, to get diarrhoea vaccines and pneumonia vaccines into all the children in the world. And so, the GAVI approach, where GAVI buys the vaccines at the very lowest price with that donor money, has worked very well. That’s why deaths of children under five, since the year 2000, in the world at large has been cut in half. It’s an even higher percentage if you just focus on Africa. So, we have that success story. GAVI had a hard time getting money from the United States, until recently, which was fairly key, so both Melinda and I were working on that. We were successful in getting a $4 billion allocation for GAVI. In the meantime, we were giving money to get these factories ready. So, the whole vaccine model that emerged on GAVI, that’s what we’re trying to use here. Now, doing it very quickly is a challenge because you never want to build a factory that can’t make quality vaccines. You really would prefer to use vaccines that have gone through the toughest regulatory process, like the US regulator or the UK regulator, and then receive the WHO blessing. What would you have to say to those who are sceptical about taking any vaccine? For people who care about childhood death, vaccines are the best thing that ever happened. Smallpox killed over a million people a year, and because of vaccines, now smallpox is gone. The miracle of vaccines is very clear. When a child dies, that’s a very clear thing. We have very good statistics on what that was like before we got these new vaccines. Over 10 million children were dying under the age of five every year, with a high portion of those being in Africa. The more people learn about vaccines, the more amazed they should be about how fantastic they are. We are now getting the experience with these coronavirus vaccines; I had my first dose last week. There are very, very few side effects, and it is protecting people. In fact, almost no one who has been vaccinated has had severe disease, which is really quite miraculous. I hope people will read the facts about vaccines, and how they’ve worked against other diseases, and see that now we have millions and millions of people who’ve taken this vaccine and we’re tracking that experience to make sure we were right about the overall safety. It is going to be a tragedy if a country continues to have an epidemic because of these false vaccine rumours. Nigeria is planning to spend around a billion dollars in acquiring the vaccines but, since Nigeria has low infection rates, wouldn’t it be good if most of this money was put towards strengthening the health sector and just give vaccines to the vulnerable? Well, there’s no doubt that the impact of putting money into the health system, particularly the primary health care system, will be very high in terms of saving children’s lives. And you’re absolutely right, Nigeria should not divert the very, very limited money that it has for health into trying to pay a high price for COVID-19 vaccines. The key is that Nigeria is still eligible, and so, for a lot of those vaccines, they will come through the GAVI facility that we’ve raised money for. Health in general in Nigeria is very underfunded. If you look at the primary health care centres in the north and, in particular, if you look at the vaccine coverage rates, there are millions of lives that can be saved if the primary health care system operated at a level that some other countries with the same wealth as Nigeria. I’m an advocate for the government to have more resources and prioritise health. Obviously, I’m not a voter in Nigeria, so Nigeria can decide that independently. Waiting for the GAVI vaccines would be the best thing and to put into other areas so that vaccine coverage rates, that are as low as 20% in some areas, get up to 80/90% to save children’s lives. Did you have a choice in the vaccine that you took? And secondly, I would like to know if your foundation funds anything to do with oxygen for COVID-19 in Africa? So, in terms of that last part, our foundation has been very involved in planning a lot of emergency things, including getting drugs like dexamethasone available. There’s also the African medical supplies effort, which we’re very supportive of, and it includes efforts to cause oxygen to be available, and I’m sure our office in Africa would be glad to follow up with more specifics of what we’ve done there on the work in diagnostics that we’ve supported, the African CDC which we’ve been a big supporter of and has done a good job, and the oxygen has been a very valuable thing. I ended up getting the Moderna vaccine, I had no choice, they don’t ask what your preference is. There are only two vaccines approved in the United States right now, Pfizer and Moderna. They’re both very good vaccines and very safe. |
The Federation of Muslim Women Association of Nigeria (FOMWAN) has said the continued “discrimination and denial of Muslim girls the use of Hijab has gradually eroded the confidence of Nigerian Muslim parents in the school system to protect the rights of their daughters as they seek to participate in the educational system.” The development, it warned, could worsen out-of-school cases if not immediately checked. FOMWAN therefore appealed to the Federal and States Ministries of Education “to allow for an alternative school uniform for those who need it as a matter of religious obligation without any harm to the school system and learning.” It also asked the National Assembly to legislate against discrimination against those who wear the hijab as a means of providing safe places for all women and girls to thrive in the name of equity. FOMWAN National Amirah, Halima Jibril and National PRO, Dr. Summayah Hamza, made the call on Sunday in a statement marking this year’s World Hijab Day. According to them, Nigerian Muslim families, particularly the women and girls count their blessings and woes as they join the 140 countries of the world to observe the world Hijab day. “This year’s theme #Endhijabophobia” strongly seeks to clarify all those points of misunderstanding about the intent and purpose of the hijab. It therefore behooves Muslim women and girls to interact at the personal, community and professional levels to allay all fears about the hijab especially among non-MUSLIMS. “FOMWAN advocates with the National Assembly to legislate against discrimination against those who wear the hijab as a means of providing safe places for all women and girls to thrive in the name of equity,” they said. They said that from 2013 to 2021 when, (courtesy of Nazma Khan), the world recognized the World Hijab day, FOMWAN commends the level of awareness that has been created and sustained by Islamic organizations. Advocacy for hijab The group said the event presents another opportunity for Nigerian Muslim women and girls to advocate against discrimination, harassment, intimidation and exclusiveness on account of the wearing of the hijab at the work place, in schools and while registering for examinations and identity cards. “As we speak, there are several cases of hijab denial in the courts affecting innocent school girls who live with denial of their fundamental human rights in Nigeria, a country with the largest Muslim population in West Africa. “Denial of hijab to school girls has gradually eroded the confidence of Nigerian Muslim parents in the school system to protect the rights of their daughters as they seek to participate in the educational system. “This has serious implications for a country where girls constitute 60% of the 13.2 million out-of-school children (UBEC/UNICEF, 2018). “This in itself will definitely increase the number of out-of-school children as parents explore the non-formal school system for their girls,” they said. Opportunities for muslim girls The FOMWAN said that the ‘discrimination’ has also translated into loss of opportunities for Muslim girls to actualize their dreams of service to their country as prospective professors, doctors and other professionals even when they have the potentials. The group added that “evidence abounds in the last two years that hijab is not a hindrance to attainment of academic excellence as Hijabites across Universities in Nigeria have come out tops in their various fields of study, including the sciences. “In the spirit of the theme for this year’s World Hijab Day, “#EndHijabophobia” FOMWAN calls on all interfaith platforms to collaborate to end the prejudice and stereotyping associated with the hijab among their members by creating “a live and let live” environment for all, irrespective of religious belief. “The 2018 Firdaus Amasa case has gone down in history as a positive indication that government and its agencies can be responsive to the rights of its citizens in a pluralistic system by looking at issues with a rights perspective, and within the provisions of the constitution. “It is FOMWAN’s hope that Government and its Agencies will emulate countries with Muslim Minorities who have amended their policies to accommodate the hijab as a strategy to promote the participation of women in social and economic development, and also in the professions. “FOMWAN calls on all Muslims, including those whose rights have been violated to patiently seek redress through the legal means since that remains the hope for the common man and woman,” they said. |
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Angel how far abeg come with that your trumpet |
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Nothing is impossible in the hands of God as long as she is still alive you can go to that same church you were told about it with her for deliverance |
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Small small this man don dey turn celebrity |
May God restore peace in our dear country |

