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Politics / Re: Awolowo Was Driven By An Overriding Ambition For Power-chinua Achebe by buffny: 6:48pm On Oct 03, 2012 |
afam4eva: it was ojukwu that declared war. how can a governor, military governor for that matter, proclaim himself head of state and declare a region of the country sovereign without any transparent mandate or referendum and not expect war. |
Politics / Re: Ojukwu: A Giant Who Lived For Others - Prof Achebe's Tribute To Ojukwu by buffny: 4:26pm On Oct 03, 2012 |
ojukwu was a common theif trying to steal minority land for his people. he had to run away in the end. like the warlike coward that he was. 1 Like |
Politics / Re: Greed : A 40' Container Load Of Vegetable Oil Is Ordered By Ooni Of Ife by buffny: 7:42pm On Oct 02, 2012 |
alex_101: I know this may sound crazy, but this is real and I intend to shed light on this for all to see. I met a nigerian from Oyo at a shipper's office in LA over the weekend who was loading a 40' container with skids of vegetable oil. At first, I thought he was an exporter, but during the course of our conversation as fellow nigerians, he revealed to me that he was only acting on behalf of the Ooni, who had personally ordered the consignment. He said the Ooni is greedy and hardly share things with others. He even told me that he wasn't making much from the loading and the Ooni already has a clearing agent to clear the vegetable oil for him. This dude even said that if it's possible for the Ooni to turn himself into a clearing agent, he would, so as to avoid paying anybody (agent) anything. all the atrocities in naija and nah this non issue u dey vex for. ooni of ife is not precluded by his royal position from engaging in business. total ridiculous. all traditional rulers have businesses of their own . so why u dey pick on ooni. u better go and find work. 1 Like |
Politics / Owner Of Home Health Care Agency Sentenced To 108 Months In $5.2 Million Fraud by buffny: 5:41pm On Sep 28, 2012 |
Second Owner of Houston-area Home Health Care Agency Sentenced to 108 Months in Prison for Role in $5.2 Million Medicare Fraud The former co-owner of a Houston-area home health care company was sentenced in Houston to 108 months in prison for his participation in a $5.2 million Medicare fraud scheme, announced the Department of Justice, the FBI and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Princewill Njoku, a former co-owner and administrator at Family Healthcare Group, was sentenced yesterday by U.S. District Judge Nancy Atlas in the Southern District of Texas to 108 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. Njoku was ordered to pay $5.1 million in restitution jointly and severally with his co-defendants. In January 2011, Njoku pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud, one count of conspiracy to pay illegal kickbacks to patient recruiters and sixteen counts of paying such illegal kickbacks. According to court documents and other evidence presented to the court, Family Healthcare Group, a Houston home health care company, purported to provide skilled nursing to Medicare beneficiaries. According to the evidence, Princewill Njoku paid co-conspirators to recruit Medicare beneficiaries for the purpose of Family Healthcare Group filing claims with Medicare for skilled nursing that was medically unnecessary or not provided. Njoku and his co-conspirators then falsified documents to support the fraudulent payments from Medicare. Njoku is the ninth defendant sentenced in connection with this scheme, including Njoku’s co-owner, Clifford Ubani, who also received a 108 month sentence earlier this month. One remaining defendant awaits sentencing. The sentence was announced by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson of the Southern District of Texas; Special Agent-In-Charge Stephen L. Morris of the FBI’s Houston Field Office; Special Agent-in-Charge Mike Fields of the Dallas Regional Office of HHS’s Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG) and the Texas Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU). This case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Charles D. Reed and Deputy Chief Sam S. Sheldon of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. The case was investigated by the FBI, HHS-OIG, Texas OAG-MFCU and the Federal Railroad Retirement Board-OIG, and was brought as part of the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, supervised by the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas. Since their inception in March 2007, Medicare Fraud Strike Force operations in nine locations have charged more than 1,330 defendants who collectively have falsely billed the Medicare program for more than $4.4 billion. In addition, the HHS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with the HHS-OIG, are taking steps to increase accountability and decrease the presence of fraudulent providers. To learn more about the Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), go to: www.stopmedicarefraud.gov . http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2012/June/12-crm-838.html |
Politics / Re: British Tabloids View Of Makoko Waterfront Slum by buffny: 2:16pm On Sep 28, 2012 |
most of these folks are from benin republic and togo . with a few ilaje ,igbo and ijaw. so u guys should go jump off a bridge . ok. go and drink acid. 22 years after Maroko, Makoko faces same fate * Where do we go from here? -Victims * It is not illegal to live in shacks -SERAC * I feel ashamed growing up in Makoko - Queens College student Written by Kehinde Oyetimi Sunday, July 22, 2012 Exactly 22 years after the demolition of Maroko, Makoko has come under the sledge hammer of the Lagos State government. It is their season of fear. From Adukpor to Oko-Agbon, from Sogunro to Egun communities, all in Makoko, it is a rueful ruin that binds them. Residents have been counting their woes while the government insists it is time to go. KEHINDE OYETIMI in this piece brings the soulful songs of dislodged Makoko residents. Dislodged residents paddling the remnants of their belongings from Makoko advertisement ON Saturday, July 14, this reporter was called by one of the ruling chiefs in Makoko, Chief F. Aganyan. His complaint "we have been asked to evict Makoko. You were the one who reported us last year in the Sunday Tribune. Please come and place our plight on the newspaper." In July 1990, the Lagos State government under Raji Rasaki argued that Maroko was below sea level and needed urgent infrastructural revamping which would lead to its demolition. The news of their enervating eviction rudely roused Maroko residents from the caress of their sleep that windy, rainy July morning. There were crowded cries and vengeful vexations. The tearful tie that held the residents together could not extend its grip to the government. It was July 14, 1990. Maroko was raised down, demolished. That eviction was regarded as one of the worst in Nigeria's history. It is 22 years after with the victims still crying against the government's insensitive. There were claims that over 6,000 lost their lives in that dislodgement. A similar fate today awaits Makoko residents. For them, it is a season of fear. "We have spent 122 years here; where are we expected to go?" Last year, when this reporter visited Makoko, it was a mixture of mire and merriment. Grime freely floated on the water. Children played with abandonment within the shacks and around them. The rows of raised bamboo buildings with canoes anchored around showed a community at peace with nature. The environs mirrored waste and environmental degradativity. Where health hazard stared this reporter in the face, Makoko residents only saw and spoke of the place as a goldmine. They were undisturbed by the slush around them. Half-dressed, residents shouted greetings from one shack to the other; they spoke with so much familiarity despite their large population. With the aid of canoes, food vendors, students, and residents moved from place to the other, unperturbed by the risks that lurked in such environments. It is a mega slum in the mega city of Lagos. The recent eviction by the Lagos State government premised on the fact that they were living under close to the power line and had posed environmental nuisance has continued to generate controversies both within and outside the country as various rights groups have indicated interest in the plight of the people. For agitated residents of Makoko, they had been there since 1890 and therefore had known no other life aside existing on water. Tracing their history, the head of the local heads referred to as Baales, Chief F. U. Aganyan, stated that, "I am a son to my forefathers. My forefathers were the first settlers in Makoko community as far back as 1890. It was their fishing activities that brought them from Badagry, south Egbado and the old Dahomey which is now Benin Republic. They travelled from all these places to settle in Makoko community. There was just one Egun language spoken by the three communities. Those who went to Badagry were from Dahomey, Ghana, Togo and even the Aworis. From Badagry, they engaged in fishing and trading. They moved down to this place. "Our parents took fishing as very vital since they were not interested or had no exposure to education. They began to live here and therefore started sand-filling some parts of this place. It was very swampy. They built shacks and anchored their canoes whenever they returned from their fishing expedition. "The water on which we live here is not clean and the government understands the health hazards that this would constitute. The government has repeatedly insisted that we should stay far away from the power line and the third mainland bridge. But some of us have been stubborn. The government has insisted that we should quit. We do not have any power to fight the government. If the government decides to relocate us, fine but there is nothing like that. Where do we go if the government refuses to relocate us? We are over a million here. Imagine since the time that we have been staying here. "We have Egun, Ilaje, Yoruba, Igbo communities here. Among the Egun, we have five bales-we Egun community, Makoko; Adukpor 1 community, Makoko; we have Adukpor 11 community, Makoko; we have Adukpor 111 community, Makoko; we have Oko-agbon 1 community, Oko-agbon 11 community, Oko-agbon 111 community; we have Sogunro community 1 and Sogunro community 11. All these contain 10 baales." "We are unable to find some of our children who fell into the water during the demolition" The demolition which started since Monday, July 16, has rendered many of the residents homeless who claim not to have any other place to go. They have however argued that some of their children were discovered missing during the demolition. Sunday Tribune was told that some toddlers were left in the shacks while their parents went out. On getting back, they discovered that their shacks had been destroyed with no trace of the children. According to Mr Ewajane Osowo, "When the demolition started, we had some losses. While they were demolishing the houses on the water, some children whose parents were not around got missing. We are yet to find them. Their parents are looking for them." He further stated that the Lagos State government was only placing them a bad name just to get rid of them. "I was born and bred here. I am 32 years old. We desire to live a better life but the way it is we cannot help ourselves. There is no way we can be living in the highland and be fishing in the lagoon. Many of us are fishermen. There is nothing spiritual that binds us to the water. President Jonathan grew up in a place like this. There are other places in the world where people live on the waterfront but they are taken care of unlike us. "It is untrue that many of us are from neighbouring countries. Majority of us are Ijaw, Ilaje and Egun. Some of us are from Ondo, Ogun and Badagry. We know what happened to residents of Maroko; they were not given anything after they were removed. Makoko is a goldmine to us. They are trying to call a cat a bad name in order to kill it. If they provide a better place for us, we will go but there is no place as good for us as this place," Osowo stated. "We are not going anywhere; we cannot live elsewhere except on water" Despite looking ruffled and complaining of the losses recorded, the head of the Egun community in Makoko, Mr. J.P. Agbe Emmanuel argued that it was impossible for them to stop living on water. He contended that "We have been here since 1890. We have spent 122 years here. Even if the government provides another place for us, we will not go. Our work demands that we live on water." Continuing he stated that the state government's directive for them to vacate living around the power line was welcome but that it was unfair for them to vacate the entire place. "There was no previous notice given to us concerning the demolition of this place. We are Egun people; we cannot live on the ground because we are fishermen. We are the major suppliers of fish to the entirety of Lagos and other neighbouring states. The government knows that and recognises that there is a union of fishermen. I am the president of the society which is called Gbenopo Society. During Bola Tinubu's time, Gbajabiamila was commissioner for environment. We were called. They appreciated us. During the 2011 elections, our vote was the highest in Yaba local government area. Our population is over a million. There are many things on the water. "The present commissioner of environment, Tunji Bello, was here. We took him around. He is aware of our population. Even Hon Oluremi Tinubu recognises our presence here. She would not want us to leave here. We want the government to assist here. They should leave us alone. There is no governmental assistance here," he said. "Fashola could not have won if he had given us quit notice before the 2011 election" Piqued by what he described as a betrayal of trust by the Fashola administration, Mr. John Mawutin as described as unfair what the state government did to them. He argued that the present administration would not have won the 2011 governorship election without their votes. "We pay taxes to the state government. We voted massively for the present state administration. Our vote alone can bring the governor of the state in. Governor Fashola could not have won in 2011 if he had given us this quit notice. We were never given any prior notice. This is the first notice to be given us. "There is nothing spiritual about our interaction with the water. Our forefathers started here in 1890. As we are sand filling the water, we are moving. You don't expect us to follow what happened to those in Maroko and Bariga where government used forced eviction. When we leave here, where is the alternative place that the federal government has provided for us? The state government should leave us alone. We were born her; we schooled here; we thank God that we can speak and write and we contribute our quota to the development of Lagos and the entire nation. [color=#990000] "I am from Cotonou but lived here for over 45 years; where do I start from?" Mr. Paschal Amukpo was born in Cotonou but was barely over three years when his parents brought him over to Makoko. He argued that his dilemma was how to begin again if the only thing he knew, fishing, was taken from him. According to him, "I have been here for over 45 years. I am almost 50 years of age. I was a little boy when I was brought here. They claim that we must vacate this place. I have been fishing here since I was a boy. We must live on the water to be able to catch fish. We prefer it here. "Even where you are standing today was water; it was our effort that sand filled this place. By the power of Jesus, they will not take us to any other place. We can't leave here. Where else will be as precious to us as Makoko? Makoko is our America. Cotonou and Nigeria are one. Nigeria cannot do without us. We are one."[/color] Makoko demolition: Assault on Nigeria's cultural fabric-UK research fellow In a letter written by Ebun Akinsete from the University of Bolton to the Lagos State government, she canvassed for the rhetoric of engagement and partnership. According to her, "The demolition of Makoko is an assault on the cultural fabric of Lagos state. At a time when we are promoting the ideals of reinforcing the unique identity of place in our redevelopment efforts, why should we seek to create yet another soulless clone of a waterfront development which will only bring with it the gentrification of the area? "Makoko is not beyond redemption; take Ganvie in neighbouring Republic of Benin for example. A thriving community of 30,000 residents demonstrates how a viable water top community can be maintained within a West African context." No plan to resettle them - Lagos State government Defending the demolition, the Lagos State commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development, Mr Adesegun Oniru, was reported to have argued that the demolition was coming on the heel of protecting the environment and the lives of affected residents. According to him, "There is an electrical pilot that goes across the shanties on the water and we don't want disasters to happen in that area." He was reported to have said that there was no plan to resettle the people because they had illegally occupied the place. |
Politics / $45M Medicare Scam Stretched From Houston To Nigeria . Omo Igbo Strikes Again. by buffny: 2:21am On Sep 28, 2012 |
thieves. http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Medicare-scam-stretched-from-Houston-to-Nigeria-3725436.php When United Airlines Flight 143 hit Bush Intercontinental's tarmac at 5:18 a.m., the Lagos overnighter came with a long-sought passenger: a handcuffed Nigerian fugitive who absconded from Houston days after his boss and co-workers were indicted in a $45 million Medicare scam. The extradition of Godwin Chiedo Nzeocha marked a beguiling chapter in the case of a bogus Houston physical therapy clinic called City Nursing Services and accusations of Medicare fraud, money laundering and luxury living with American tax dollars. Indictments of multiple characters in the scheme include allegations of using proceeds from the fraud to ship money and vehicles - including 80 18-wheelers - from Houston to Nigeria and stashing cash in Nigerian bank accounts. More than $831,000 sits idle in a Bank of America account in the United States. Nzeocha's unusual return to Houston in June punctuates the intricate connections between him and Nigerian associates who have been arrested, convicted, sentenced or sent to prison in a conspiracy to steal from the nation's largest insurer for the elderly and the disabled. All are accused of conspiring to pay recruiters to find patients, who also were paid to fill out bogus or blank claims forms submitted to Medicare for treatment never delivered. After prodding from U.S. prosecutors, Nzeocha was arrested by Nigerian police at the home he shared with his parents in Lagos, having traced him through the address he used when he opened the Nigerian accounts. His attorney, Edmond O'Suji says there's no proof, despite his name on the account, that they belong to his client. "He said they're (accounts) not his," the defense attorney said. Pamela Ise, another player who supposedly helped orchestrate phony billing claims, also is a fugitive and believed to be in Nigeria. 9 are indicted Of the $45 million City Nursing tried to bill to Medicare from its now-locked offices on the second floor of 9888 Bissonnet, $30 million landed in the hands of its employees, all of it approved by the nation's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Nine people were indicted; six have been convicted and sent to prison. "This is not your usual case because of the amount of the fraud in the (single) indictment," Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Redlinger said of City Nursing after leaving Nzeocha's initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate George Hanks Jr. City Nursing's owner Umawa Oke Imo is serving a 27-year federal prison sentence, and a West University anesthesiologist he hired to evaluate the phony patients is serving 11 years. His office manager was sentenced to 12. Three others who were paid to recruit patients for the scam pleaded guilty, and a fourth worker has yet to be tried. Sean Buckley, attorney for Imo, says the scheme's architects were Nigerian fugitives Ise and Nzeocha, who acted as physical therapist aide. "He (Imo) did not realize that Pamela Ise and Godwin Nzeocha had been fictitiously billing the Medicare program for services that had no basis in reality," Buckley said. But records reviewed by the Houston Chronicle show Imo in 2008 paid Nzeocha $109,000. When asked why such a check would be paid to an unlicensed physical therapy aide, the defense attorney had no comment. Nzeocha is accused of paying patient recruiters and doctoring patient files and documents so it would appear that City Nursing provided physical therapy services. Nzeocha's attorney said he believes his client did nothing illegal. "All I know is that Mr. Nzeocha worked for City Nursing (as an aide) and was paid for that," O'Suji said. "He has certification as an aide." The last known clue of the missing Ise came from the Port of Houston and an FBI affidavit filed by agent Kevin Lammons. In it, details about shipping container No. TRLU7416095 resulted in a phone call to the FBI. The container was being shipped by Ise. Inside, a 2009 Lexus was marked for delivery to the southeastern Nigerian seaport of Calabar. But the container, examined at the St. George U.S. Customs exam warehouse near the Houston Ship Channel, held more than the luxury automobile. Tucked in a box and a bin were financial books, contracts, banking information and patient files related to Ise's billing work for City Nursing. The Chronicle's review of court documents and business records shows the criminal enterprise was long in the making, its ill-gotten gains spreading across two continents. The records show Imo used Medicare money from City Nursing's American bank accounts to pay himself $1 million to fund his fledgling Nigerian businesses Another $1.7 million was spent for "purchase of tanks (tanker-trucks)" and "eighty trucks to Lagos (Nigeria)," for his petroleum transport business and a bottling company. List of creditors The bounty amounted to a boon for a man who just a few years before was down on his luck. In 2004, the Sugar Land resident's Wellcare Rehabilitation Services venture, operating out of his home, had driven him to bankruptcy. His creditors were piling up: Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor Med Care, Fort Bend ISD, Memorial Hermann Hospital System and the IRS. A $400-a-month payment plan was set up for 60 months. But just two years later, he was back in business with City Nursing Services, located on the second floor of 9888 Bissonnet, a six-story building between U.S. 59 and the Sam Houston Tollway. The building is one of a handful of mid-rises that house a honeycomb of medical offices: pain clinics, Medicaid pharmacies, private EMS companies, home health agencies, physical therapy and rehab outfits. This pot-holed strip of Bissonnet is an unlikely Rodeo Drive of low- income medicine, its parking lots often crammed with cars of the working poor and destitute. At least 54 companies with National Provider Identifiers, the number needed to bill Medicare and Medicaid, are or have been housed at 9888 Bissonnet, and defendants in at least three different federal health care fraud cases worked for companies in the building. One, the owner of Double Daniels EMS of Houston, is accused of billing more than $1.7 million in phony claims to Medicare. Another, who ran Houston Compassionate Care, is accused of using her business's Medicare number to access Medicare's database to find and solicit potential patients. Links with doctor Imo's choice of address signaled his arrival in a Medicare and Medicaid mecca. But he needed a doctor to diagnose patients and prescribe the physical therapy services his company provided. Through a Nigerian go-between, he contacted Dr. Christina Clardy, who was living with her family in a $1 million-plus home in West University. Imo plucked Clardy from the city's northwest side, where she was working for two pain clinics that later were shut down by state investigators as pill mills. Clardy was charged with engaging in an organized criminal activity for writing prescriptions for "other than valid" reasons. The state's charges were dropped when she was sentenced in the Medicare case. Even City's Nursing's so-called physical therapy office setup seemed a beacon for fraud. Inside Suite 248 was one exercise room with a couple of treadmills and bikes. "Not much else," federal prosecutor Julie Redlinger told jurors in one of the trials. Documents show a former employee in 2009 tipped off investigators that she had seen Imo pay patients up to $150 to visit City Nursing. She told them only one physical therapist came to the office and he came just 20 minutes a day. It was later determined that no certified physical therapists worked at the clinic. In laying the case out to jurors, Redlinger said the scheme relied on just five easy steps. Pay recruiters to bring patients. Pay the patients to sign blank treatment forms and offer up their Medicare number. Pay doctors to write the orders for physical therapy never provided or supervised. Bill Medicare. And finally, create phony patient files about their nonexistent physical therapy treatment. "Five easy steps, $30 million," she concluded. terri.langford@chron.com |
Crime / Re: Rambo-style Robbery: Why We Shook Lagos by buffny: 9:08pm On Sep 27, 2012 |
kettykin: we fought to liberate minorities from you thieving scum . u were killing the minorities so as to claim their land . and we fought to liberate them finito. |
Politics / Re: Lagos Deports Anambra Refugees by buffny: 5:23pm On Sep 27, 2012 |
M-16: buhaha and we yorubas will laff when erosion swallow your entire region. erosion and mudslide. 1 Like |
Politics / Re: Lagos Deports Anambra Refugees by buffny: 3:45pm On Sep 27, 2012 |
Austine.E: keep ur igbo armed robber self in ur akpu village. dirty stinking akpu smelling igbo bastard. |
Politics / Re: Who Is A Lagosian? by buffny: 2:45pm On Sep 26, 2012 |
an indigene of lagos is someone whose ancestral village is in lagos. finish. if ur village is in enugu , then u are not an indigene of lagos. if ur village is in ogun then u are not indigene of lagos if ur village is in ondo then u are not an indigene of lagos. if ur village is in kano , then u are not an indigene of lagos. if ur village is in rivers state , then u are not an indigene of lagos. that being said any nigerian has the right to live and work wherever they wish. |
Politics / Re: Who Is A Lagosian? by buffny: 12:44pm On Sep 26, 2012 |
a lagosian is anyone whose ancestral village is in lagos. if ur ancestral village is in lagos then u are lagosian. anything else is questionable. 5 Likes |
Politics / Re: Lagos Deports Anambra Refugees by buffny: 12:35pm On Sep 26, 2012 |
aryzgreat: who dey hold una. we fit stop sellign u land stop helping u to build house. finito |
Travel / Re: 2 Nigerian Students Face Deportation At A Canadian University by buffny: 6:04pm On Sep 23, 2012 |
what kind of fucking govt is giving out scholarships for students to study theater arts and mass comm in a freaking foreign university. theres something fishy going on here. |
Politics / Re: Remembering Ejikeme Okoye, The First Cambridge Fellow From Nigeria by buffny: 10:28pm On Sep 18, 2012 |
he wasnt a cambridge fellow. where does it say he was. |
Education / There As Only Been One Nigerian Elected As A Fellow At Trinity College Cambridge by buffny: 7:45pm On Sep 18, 2012 |
And of course he is yoruba. http://www.technologyreview.com/tr35/profile.aspx?trid=225 Adekunle Adeyeye, 33 Nanotechnology National University of Singapore Ten years ago,Adekunle Adeyeye left his computer-programming job in Ibadan,Nigeria, to get a master’s in microelectronics engineering at the University of Cambridge in England.Despite a rocky start,he finished atop his class.He joined the physics PhD program at the university’s Cavendish Laboratory,where he researched magnetism in thin films.He then became the first Nigerian elected as a prestigious junior research fellow of Trinity College at Cambridge.There,Adeyeye devised nanofabrication tech- niques that allowed him to create novel nano magnets.His mentor,physicist Stephen Julian, attributes Adeyeye’s success to “tremendous energy and creativity.”Today Adeyeye is a founding researcher at the $10 million Information Storage Materials Laboratory at the National University of Singapore,where he works in the field of “spintronics.”Conventional electronics take advan- tage of the charge of electrons in semiconducting materials.But electrons also have a property called “spin.”If Adeyeye succeeds in better utilizing electron spin,he could help revolutionize memory and logic devices,leading to smaller,faster and less power-hungry computers. |
Politics / Re: Pixes Of Major Kaduna Nzegwu's Grave At The Prestigious Military Cemetery In Kd by buffny: 5:53pm On Sep 16, 2012 |
how can somebody who killed democrats , premiers , prime ministers and their spouses in cold blood in the name of a stupid revolution be considered a hero ?? |
Politics / Re: Mismanagement At The National Stadium Abuja ..pictures by buffny: 8:27pm On Sep 11, 2012 |
why dont they fucking contract out the maintenance to some company . what kind of bullshit is this. |
Politics / Re: Obi Launches Battle Against Kidnapping In Anambra by buffny: 5:04pm On Sep 06, 2012 |
IGBO PEOPLE SHA. UR CRIMINALITY NEVER ceases to amaze. how the Bleep u gonna have rpgs in your house. ak 47 rifles rpgs and massive amount of bullets. hmmmmmmmm |
Culture / Re: Igbos In Bini by buffny: 8:48pm On Sep 03, 2012 |
EKEPEYE IS NOT , I REPEAT, NOT , IGBO!!! yet IGBOS WANT TO IMPOSE ON THEM WHY THEY HAVE SAID IT WITH THEIR OWN MOUTH , WE ARE NOT IGBO. WE HAVE NO ANCESTRAL LINK WITH IGBO. |
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