Cocolacec's Posts
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womenareapes:Illiterate i wasnot replying to you. |
Angelfrost:South west no need am she can queue for Asari dokubo. |
falopey:The report is according to men/women ratio not single/marriage ratio.In china and india,married women are kidnapped in some rural areas to be married off to other men.There are over 34 million men than women in china. |
Top 10 Countries where women are in (short supply/high demand Based on popular assumption, women are more than men on the planet earth, but to our and may be your surprise too, the geographic distribution is not even if the above statement is to be accepted as true. Some demographical facts from some countries have proven that women are in short supply, and this can be attributed to factor like gender imbalance, for instance, infant mortality is higher in boys than girls in across the globe. Based on the male to female sex ratio estimation done by the United States’ Central Intelligence Agency, the world average for the ratio of males/females is 1.01, which translates to the fact that there are 1.01 males for every female (more males than females)... Countries with short supply of women includes: 10. Switzerland is short of female 9. India is short of female 8. Sweden (no wonder there are more female Aupair welcome to the country annually) 7. Italy is short of female 6. Finland is short of female 5. China is short of female with 34 million more men than women with a ratio of 88.03. 4. Cyprus is short of female 3. Canada is short of female 2. Iceland is short of female 1. Norway is short of female |
Karlifate:Countries with short supply of women includes: 10. Switzerland is short of female 9. India is short of female 8. Sweden (no wonder there are more female Aupair welcome to the country annually) 7. Italy is short of female 6. Finland is short of female 5. China is short of female with 34 million more men than women with a ratio of 88.03. 4. Cyprus is short of female 3. Canada is short of female 2. Iceland is short of female 1. Norway is short of female https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlkkXkxQdgg |
osamz007:Cant you see the killer has mental problem?leave God out your nonsense.I wonder where was the mother. |
They took our 7 Days old baby for Religious reasons is the story of a couple who had their 7 days old baby taken away due to their own failings. The premise of this stream is to help us within the black community to wake up and do better in terms of handling our kids / family abroad. Please help share They took our 7 Days old baby for Religious reasons live streams so others can learn. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUHzS9xbDU4 |
OfficialAwol:The US and EU make all the policies buhari is rolling out To Nigeria.Nigeria is a slave camo for the colonialist.Independence is the handover of power of white colonialists to house nigger.Buhari is on autopilot,he doesnt have real control. |
Rugaria:If Americans come into Nigeria,they will bomb and use new war technologies to kill,maim and destroy as many people as possible only to labelled them collateral damage.Go and ask Iraqis and Afghans in their new democracy. |
WakeNbaked:He and the uncle could have eaten poisoned food as unmerited favour. Why didnt the uncle do a farm work to earn a living?The uncle didnt teach Adeboye good manners,It was better for them to beg for food in their village or work for food. Thank you Adeboye for alerting us that your members cannot be trusted in a business setting because they will bankrupt the company and call it unmerited favour. |
SweetHearted:The man belong to the occult in the spiritual realm.Dont be deceived. |
mu2sa2:All religions are cultism no different from aiye,bucaneers.The only difference is a verse or chapter of their books to trigger the switch. |
Dat2jo:Scammer alert |
TooMuchStuff:It is Mamman Daura,Tinubu is hale and hearty. |
Very disturbing to see Mr Martins an Embassy staff in Berlin, accused of sleeping with married women before renewing their Nigerian passport or issuing them visa. This is a normal thing in Nigeria even in private companies where the Boss sleeps with ladies to gain or retain their job but very unfortunate. https://www.facebook.com/416732518754851/posts/1035282823566481/?vh=e&d=n
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XANDERO85:So that the youths will burn it down,nba. |
sapphiere:I think the news is fake.She is likely Ned´s sister in law engaged to be married to someone else. |
bukatyne:I know what i am saying from experience. |
9jayes:After politican the next lucrative business is Religion,they make a killing.You can open bank on peoples head.BBnaija is chicken change. |
MrCover:Feels like 10years in 1 year marriage doesnt sound good.If you are in a love marriage,even after 10 years of marriage you will feel like you have been in the relationship for lesser years only the children or dates will remind you of how old your marriage is. |
Bushiri on the run https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBiT-j4KUOw Published on 15 Nov 2020 Confusion, anger, and mystery still surround the departure of Prophet Bushiri to Malawi. SA authorities can't explain how the self-proclaimed prophet escaped the country. eNCA's Tshego Moagi, who has been tracking this story. |
What now for self-proclaimed prophet, Shepherd Bushiri and his wife, Mary? Home Affairs gave them 30 days to explain how they came to live in South Africa.The department's issued a notice to the couple, asking them to clarify discrepancies in their applications for permanent residency. But a high court has suspended this until after the Bushiris plead in their criminal trial in May next year. eNCA’s Tshegohaco Moagi has more. Courtesy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfn12-yq9jE |
chubinwa:Why call her devil incarnate,male pastors do this all the time. |
TheCork:Mr Ajegunle of London(Peckham) stop lying
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akstrending:There is a child in every adult and vice versa. |
OfficialAwol:The bad guys always win because they are more ruthless and callous. |
Netherlands The Kingdom of the Netherlands is made up of four constituent countries: the Netherlands themselves, plus the Caribbean islands of Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten. The Charter of the Kingdom of the Netherlands is the law governing relations between the four parts, and has adapted itself to change since it was first enacted in 1954. For example, Suriname was a constituent country of the Kingdom from 1954 until 1975, when the South American nation gained full independence. In the Charter (Article 58) it is said that Aruba can launch, at any time, the procedure to put an end to the arrangements provided for in the legal text. This amounts in practice to declare independence. Some sectors of the Dutch political spectrum support the completion of what they understand is a de facto decolonization process, and openly speak of granting independence to the three Caribbean islands. “If they call me tomorrow that they want out, then we’ll arrange it immediately,” Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte was quoted as saying in 2013. But this can not legally occur until the three Caribbean countries choose to. Aruba illustrates that apparent paradox: in 1977, islanders voted to become a fully sovereign state, but in the 1990s the decision was indefinitely postponed given that Aruba itself was unsure about the move. In Curaçao, the pro-independence movement has promised to deliver independence in the 2020s, but no further steps have been taken. France To conclude with, it may be surprising that the “indivisible” republic (Article 1 of the Constitution) is listed in this article. But in fact, France recognizes the right to independence of one of its territories —New Caledonia. It does so since 1998, when the French government and political representatives (both pro-independence and unionists) of the Oceanian nation signed the Nouméa Accords. The agreements —which were subsequently ratified in a referendum— foresee the holding of a vote on self-determination in November 2018 at the latest. If independence is rejected, the 1998 deal provides for the possibility of holding another two referendums on the same issue. Following the Nouméa Accords, an amendment to the French Constitution was passed in order to insert into it a set of “transitional provisions”, which form its 13th title. These provisions envisage “the attainment of full sovereignty” by New Caledonia —provided, of course, that the local population votes for. https://www.nationalia.info/new/10936/ten-countries-that-grant-the-right-to-independence-to-some-of-their-territories-and-france |
Papua New Guinea The second largest country in Oceania has no specific constitutional provisions that allow secession. Still, this did not prevent the government of Papua New Guinea and the provisional government of the island of Bougainville from signing a peace agreement in 2001 —ending a deathly conflict in the latter territory— which provided for the creation of a semi-autonomous Bougainville government within Papua New Guinea, the holding of elections starting from 2005, and as a culmination, the calling of a referendum on independence at some date between June 2015 and June 2020. In 2016, the governments of Bougainville and Papua New Guinea struck a provisional deal on the holding of the referendum, which was set for 15 June 2019. According to analysts, it is likely that a majority will vote for separation. Independence would then create a new state of 250,000 inhabitants, located between Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. United Kingdom Without a Constitution that could forbid or allow it, the UK has shown in the last two decades that it could be ready to accept the secession of at least two parts of its territory —Scotland and Northern Ireland. In the case of Scotland, UK prime minister David Cameron agreed with his Scottish counterpart Alex Salmond to hold an independence referendum in September 2014. The deal was struck after Salmond’s pro-independence SNP party won an absolute majority in the 2011 Scottish Parliament election. A “yes” vote would have led to the creation of a sovereign Scottish state. In the case of Northern Ireland, the 1998 Good Friday Agreement —signed by the UK and Irish governments and eight political parties in Northern Ireland— opens the door to the reunification of Ireland by democratic means. London and Dublin will be forced to implement it as long as a majority in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland votes for in a referendum. Following the Brexit earthquake, Sinn Féin asked the UK Secretary of State —who may call such a vote at any time— to call a referendum on reunification Yet another territory could be added to the list: the Falkland Islands, which in 2013 voted on keeping their status as a British overseas territory. The “yes” option won, with 99.8% votes for. Had the “no” vote been successful, a second referendum should have been called. In that event, it is plausible that independence would have been one of the options included on the ballot. |
Moldova Since independence, the former Soviet republic has faced two secessionist challenges, in Transnistria —which remains unresolved— and Gagauzia. The latter, mainly inhabited by a Turkic-speaking people, declared independence from Moldova in August 1991. But Gagauz leaders wished to maintain ties with the USSR or Russia, and the population feared that Gagauz identity would be diluted if Moldova ever joined a prospective Greater Romania —the possibility was being discussed at that time. The dispute was resolved in 1994, after the Moldovan Parliament passed the law on the autonomy of Gagauzia, which contains a clause that allows the “external self-determination” of the territory. Under what conditions? The Gagauz legal code specifies that it could be triggered “if the status of the Republic of Moldova as an independent state changes.” In other words, this means that should Romania annex Moldova, Gagauzia would be entitled to secede and establish itself as an independent state. Denmark The Scandinavian country is a unitary state, but it also comprises two territories that enjoy a high degree of autonomy —Greenland and the Faroe Islands. Since the adoption of its 2009 Statute of Autonomy, Greenland has had the right to self-determination and independence recognized from the Danish state. The same right was denied to the Faroes when they sought to exercise it in 1946, after they held a controversial referendum. Nevertheless, several Danish prime ministers have in recent decades considered Faroese independence as a plausible, acceptable outcome. Moreover, the recognition of the right to self-determination is one of the main clauses contained in a draft Constitution that the Faroes are expected to vote on 25 April 2018. If the Constitution is approved, the right to secession from Denmark will be legally established. |
The Constitution also specifies the procedure to achieve independence: the seceding nation must do a formal request, a referendum in the region must then be held, and finally the transfer of powers to the council of the seceding nation and the partition of property must be organized. In practice, however, Ethiopia is currently ruled by the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), which holds 500 of 547 seats in the federal Parliament —its allies control the remaining 47 seats. The EPRDF is accused by worldwide human rights organizations and by Ethiopian opposition groups alike of ruling the country with an iron hand and of not allowing any real democratic system to take root. Under those conditions, it is difficult to think that any territory would be now allowed to launch its own way towards independence. The 2016 crackdown against protests in Oromia —the country’s largest and most populated region— are an example of that. However, the fact that the Constitution says what it says is no small deed, bearing in mind that any future regime change and transition to democracy could lead to a new scenario in which the right to secession could be effectively implemented. Saint Kitts and Nevis Another less well known, but equally interesting case of admission of the right to secession is to be found in the federal republic of Saint Kitts and Nevis, comprising those two homonymous islands in the Caribbean. The 1983 Constitution grants the smaller island —Nevis— the unilateral right to secede. The rule specifies that independence must be supported by the people of Nevis in a referendum by a two-thirds majority (article 113). Nevis has organized two independence votes so far. The first one, in 1977, was held before the adoption of the Constitution, and was nullified by the central government of the federation, albeit more than 99% of voters supported separation. At that time, the pro-independence movement used to argue that, from the moment that the two islands had become a UK associated, semi-independent state, Nevis had found itself turned into a de facto colony of Saint Kitts, the Nevisian islanders’ quality of life having fallen in the meantime. The second referendum took place in 1998, after the current Constitution had already been passed and the Federation was completely freed from UK rule. The Assembly of Nevis called the referendum. 62% of voters said “yes” to independence. The share therefore felt short of the required threshold, and independence was not achieved. Liechtenstein Nobody would imagine that such a tiny country could wish to further subdivide itself. But the fact is that the Principality of Liechtenstein is the only country in the world where each of its municipalities —numbering eleven— enjoys a constitutional right to independence (Article 4). The resident citizens of each individual municipality are the ones who can decide whether their village/town starts the secession procedure, the remaining citizens of Liechtenstein not being allowed to block it. No municipality has so far made use of that provision. Such a striking principle even had the Venice Commission referring to it in an opinion issued in 2002. “The creation of a new, even smaller State, would seem to be inappropriate and undesirable,” the body said, but “this does not change the fact that a constitutional provision as discussed here is not in violation of international law.” Indeed, the secession of some municipalities would result in unusual situations. If Schaan decided to become independent, Liechtenstein would be divided into two geographically disconnected halves. The independence of Schellenberg (3.5 square kilometers) would create the third smallest country in the world. Finally, if Planken (less than 400 inhabitants) went its own way, it would become the least populated country on Earth. |
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