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CodeTemplarr's Posts

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FamilyRe: Married Women Share Battles They Fight In Their Homes by CodeTemplarr: 1:35am On Oct 13, 2024
Why will he help with kids when he has to work extra hard to dig a borehole, generate electricity and pump water as against you going to the streams to fetch as it is in the books that inspired the provider role of man?

He also provides milled rice + grains and not the raw ones you have to go mill yourself like it was in biblical times.

He probably bought blenders, miicrowave oven, freezer, and washing machine which were never under the role of provision by provider in the bible. He probably pays the electricity bills for all those.

No wonder household level Yahoo is trendy today. There has to be spiritual shortcut or support for the man to meet those numerous emanating needs outside the original purview of the provider. They can agree on any kid or young maid around as victim. Any new innovation falls under the role of the provider.

If a machine that baths and dresses babies is created today, it becomes the man's job to provide and power it. Most likely within the city where the means to rapidly expand productive output in exchange for more money is highly limited. Tell me which brand of phone did Sarah use? What channel of satellite TV provider of their time was her favourite?

Is domestic battle even harder than field battles to start with?
EducationRe: 9 Varsities Inspired Me To Establish Covenant University - Oyedepo by CodeTemplarr: 1:13am On Oct 13, 2024
To establish or to structure?
PoliticsRe: Hardship: Nigeria No Longer Working - Northern Youths Lament by CodeTemplarr: 9:15pm On Oct 12, 2024
Iceberg3:
Where dem day during buhari's 8 "glorious" years?
You dey mind those idiotics partisans?
buhari borrowed and no one asked why a rich nation was borrowing. Did pdp loot in advance?
PoliticsRe: Hardship: Nigeria No Longer Working - Northern Youths Lament by CodeTemplarr: 9:13pm On Oct 12, 2024
As long as they could access free oyel dough, it was working. once that dough started drying up, it stopped wotking to them.
CelebritiesRe: Video Of Actress Angela Okorie Shockingly Evicted From Home Over Unpaid Rent. by CodeTemplarr: 1:32pm On Oct 12, 2024
Drugs?
PoliticsRe: Obi Idea Of Borrowing Money To Save Money Doesn't Solve Anything. by CodeTemplarr: 1:30pm On Oct 12, 2024
Ogogoro people are many in Nigeria.
FamilyRe: Wife Presents Proofs To Her Cheating Husband & He Couldn’t Utter A Word (video) by CodeTemplarr: 12:28pm On Oct 12, 2024
Only tinubu and his agents here can handle such a scenario. They will go shameless and sponsor a crowd of solidarity protesters to praise the man for providing for his family. Ask heinues if you think I am lying.
PoliticsRe: Those Who Collected 'spaghetti & Clothes' To Vote Tinubu Are Suffering The Most: by CodeTemplarr: 10:20am On Oct 12, 2024
It is a lie. Their suffering is helped by that spaghetti. That doesnt stop their hustle in anyway.
PoliticsRe: As Petroleum Marketers Buy Directly From Refineries, What Will Happen To Pricing by CodeTemplarr: 10:02am On Oct 12, 2024
MadPolitician:
The government doesn't care
Yes they dont have to. They collected their full crude cost when they sold to refineries.
PoliticsRe: As Petroleum Marketers Buy Directly From Refineries, What Will Happen To Pricing by CodeTemplarr: 9:57am On Oct 12, 2024
Unions will hold sway once more and begin fixing profit level.

You know how Nigeria is. Even buscuits and perishables like pepper in local markets come under the influence of the unions and associations.
NNPCL should have just expanded some more and sell at a competitive price instaed of trying to impose a price cap by being a monopoly middleman.
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi : I Would’ve Borrowed Money To Defend The Naira! (video) by CodeTemplarr: 9:55am On Oct 12, 2024
mrvitalis:
Orange drugs factory in Anambra was facilitated by Obi

Innoson was supported by Obi 1000 cars orders with payment upfront gave innoson it's footing

Do you want to deny any of the above?
You mean Obi gave them dollars to import equipments and parts? He registerwd them with CAC?
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi : I Would’ve Borrowed Money To Defend The Naira! (video) by CodeTemplarr: 9:50am On Oct 12, 2024
stuffs2002:
After watching the video, I came to the conclusion that Obi must be a retard
like tunubu n atiku he just wants power ans has next to nothing he intends to offer. Another trial and error person hoping on media propaganda.

Maybe the desperado doesnt realize defence of Naira is just a fancy name for forex/local currency subsidy. It is a form of price regulation for a thing whose price can be influenced by demand and supply. Govt equally doesnt have a monopoly or strong control over demand and supply of same.

Remittance and demand is 50-50 between govt and private individuals, that splits the market almost evenly and is why black market is as influential as official market.
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi : I Would’ve Borrowed Money To Defend The Naira! (video) by CodeTemplarr: 9:16am On Oct 12, 2024
This man is extremely deluded.
PoliticsRe: This Civil Rule Is No Democracy’ – Nigerians Bemoan Impunity Of President, Govs by CodeTemplarr: 6:44am On Oct 12, 2024
Lol...N90B to stone satan. Satan is striking back hard through loyal elites.
PoliticsRe: Deputy Speaker Sponsors Bill To Establish Bola Ahmed Tinubu Federal University by CodeTemplarr: 6:37am On Oct 12, 2024
Kukutenla:
The sycophantic displays from this man is unbecoming
You want to establish a university and name it after a sitting office holder who will sign the bill?
And what the heck is university of Nigerian languages?
Buhari n Buratai did almost same thing.
Foreign AffairsCNN: Lebanon's Modern Day Slavery System Leaves Africans Trapped And Stranded by CodeTemplarr(op):
Beirut, Lebanon — When the first wave of Israeli airstrikes hit Beirut, Mariatu Swaray frantically called her employers to ask for help. But they had already fled abroad, leaving their Sierra Leonean domestic worker and her three-month-old son to fend for themselves.

Hours later, an Israeli missile destroyed the building next door to their home in the Lebanese capital. Now, every time there is an explosion, baby Abdul Mohammad points to the sky.

“I heard the bombing, and I was so scared,” Swaray told CNN, sitting on a thin mattress in an informal shelter for internally displaced migrant workers in Beirut. “From that moment I had to just take my kid and run away.”

After two weeks sleeping on the streets, Swaray is now camped out here, along with 150 other women and six children from Sierra Leone. Mattresses line the walls of the dark, damp concrete warehouse. There is one charging point for over 100 phones. Bats flutter above the women as they lie there in the dusty half-light.

With no possessions and no money, many of the women cannot afford data SIM cards to call home.

“I haven’t spoken to my family for ten days,” Swaray said, as Abdul Mohammed played nearby. “They must be so worried about me.”


[color=#777]‘We are suffocating': CNN speaks to migrant workers abandoned in Lebanon[/color]

In late September, the Israeli military assassinated Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Shia political and militant group Hezbollah, which is designated a terrorist organization by the United States. The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates that since then over 1.2 million people have been displaced by strikes and fighting between the Israeli Army and Hezbollah – around a fifth of the Lebanese population.

A significant proportion of the estimated 177,000 migrant workers living in Lebanon are thought to be among them. Most are employed under the country’s ‘kafala,’ or sponsorship, system. This system — used in Lebanon, Jordan and many Gulf countries — fuses a worker to one employer and in the process, their rights and agency are removed. The employer takes the worker’s passport, they are exempt from the country’s labour protections and though they can be fired, they can never quit. In 2021, UN Women estimated that “76% of all migrant workers and 99% of migrant domestic workers” in Lebanon were women.

“What we understand of the kafala system is that it sounds like a modern-day slavery system,” said Nour Shawaf, regional humanitarian policy advisor for Oxfam, speaking above the constant buzz of an Israeli drone flying above her office.


[img]https://ix.cnn.io/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/19.jpg[/img]
[color=#777]Nour Shawaf, regional Humanitarian Policy Advisor at Oxfam, stands outside her office in the centre of Beirut as drones buzz overhead and the sonic booms made by Israeli jets can be heard on Monday, October 7, 2024. Oliver Marsden[/color]

“The employers who have taken the passports of the migrants have left them with no paperwork today, so they are stuck in the country. Even if they decide to leave, they do not have legal documentation to leave.”

As the Israeli military’s bombing campaign has intensified across Lebanon, many migrant domestic workers have been abandoned by their employers who have fled their homes to save themselves.

Another migrant domestic worker from Sierra Leone, who was too scared to give her name for fear of reprisals, recalled how her employers left the house as the bombing started and told her to “stay and look after it.”

“They said they were going to the supermarket for supplies and would be right back,” she said while picking bits of foam from her mattress on the dirt-stained floor. The family never returned.

Like many others, the young woman in her twenties, was forced to seek shelter on the streets of Beirut – sleeping rough on the pavements, the parks and the public beach – before finally moving into the refuge.

[img]https://ix.cnn.io/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/1-PEOPLE-ON-MATTRESES-.jpg[/img]
[color=#777]Migrant workers from Sierra Leone take refuge in a makeshift shelter in Beirut on Sunday, October 7, following Israeli strikes on the southern suburbs of the capital in Lebanon. Oliver Marsden[/color]

Volunteers working with migrants told CNN the lack of safe places to shelter makes women especially vulnerable to trafficking. As if to make the point, while CNN was visiting the shelter, a black BMW with tinted windows slowed to an idle as it passed the entrance. Two men eyed the women taking in the air outside, before speeding off once they were spotted by volunteers.

It’s not just individual employers who seem to have deprioritized the migrant workforce they are responsible for.

Two months ago, Nasser Yassin, Lebanon’s Environment Minister and head of its national emergency committee, said in an interview with local media that by setting up 900 temporary shelters the authorities were making “preparations for the displacement of over a million Lebanese.” But half a dozen migrant workers interviewed by CNN said they had either been ejected from or turned away by these official shelters.

CNN reached out to Yassin to ask about the migrants’ claims but received no reply ahead of publication. A press statement released by the officer of Hector Hajjar, Lebanon’s Minister of Social Affairs, rejected any accusations of discrimination between displaced people and spoke of the ministry’s “commitment…to protect all displaced persons on Lebanese territory.”

Into the gap has stepped local non-profits and ordinary Lebanese citizens.


Her employer promised to return with supplies but never came back. She is one of hundreds of migrant workers trapped in Lebanon
By Oliver Marsden, for CNN

Editor’s note: This story is part of ‘The Great Illusion,’ a series by CNN’s As Equals all about work: investigating which industries are most harmful for women workers, revealing the true cost of care work, and exploring how it can all be fixed. For information about how CNN As Equals is funded and more, check out our FAQs.

Beirut, Lebanon — When the first wave of Israeli airstrikes hit Beirut, Mariatu Swaray frantically called her employers to ask for help. But they had already fled abroad, leaving their Sierra Leonean domestic worker and her three-month-old son to fend for themselves.

Hours later, an Israeli missile destroyed the building next door to their home in the Lebanese capital. Now, every time there is an explosion, baby Abdul Mohammad points to the sky.

“I heard the bombing, and I was so scared,” Swaray told CNN, sitting on a thin mattress in an informal shelter for internally displaced migrant workers in Beirut. “From that moment I had to just take my kid and run away.”

After two weeks sleeping on the streets, Swaray is now camped out here, along with 150 other women and six children from Sierra Leone. Mattresses line the walls of the dark, damp concrete warehouse. There is one charging point for over 100 phones. Bats flutter above the women as they lie there in the dusty half-light.

With no possessions and no money, many of the women cannot afford data SIM cards to call home.

“I haven’t spoken to my family for ten days,” Swaray said, as Abdul Mohammed played nearby. “They must be so worried about me.”


‘We are suffocating': CNN speaks to migrant workers abandoned in Lebanon

In late September, the Israeli military assassinated Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Shia political and militant group Hezbollah, which is designated a terrorist organization by the United States. The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates that since then over 1.2 million people have been displaced by strikes and fighting between the Israeli Army and Hezbollah – around a fifth of the Lebanese population.

A significant proportion of the estimated 177,000 migrant workers living in Lebanon are thought to be among them. Most are employed under the country’s ‘kafala,’ or sponsorship, system. This system — used in Lebanon, Jordan and many Gulf countries — fuses a worker to one employer and in the process, their rights and agency are removed. The employer takes the worker’s passport, they are exempt from the country’s labour protections and though they can be fired, they can never quit. In 2021, UN Women estimated that “76% of all migrant workers and 99% of migrant domestic workers” in Lebanon were women.

“What we understand of the kafala system is that it sounds like a modern-day slavery system,” said Nour Shawaf, regional humanitarian policy advisor for Oxfam, speaking above the constant buzz of an Israeli drone flying above her office.


Nour Shawaf, regional Humanitarian Policy Advisor at Oxfam, stands outside her office in the centre of Beirut as drones buzz overhead and the sonic booms made by Israeli jets can be heard on Monday, October 7, 2024. Oliver Marsden

“The employers who have taken the passports of the migrants have left them with no paperwork today, so they are stuck in the country. Even if they decide to leave, they do not have legal documentation to leave.”

As the Israeli military’s bombing campaign has intensified across Lebanon, many migrant domestic workers have been abandoned by their employers who have fled their homes to save themselves.

Another migrant domestic worker from Sierra Leone, who was too scared to give her name for fear of reprisals, recalled how her employers left the house as the bombing started and told her to “stay and look after it.”

“They said they were going to the supermarket for supplies and would be right back,” she said while picking bits of foam from her mattress on the dirt-stained floor. The family never returned.

Like many others, the young woman in her twenties, was forced to seek shelter on the streets of Beirut – sleeping rough on the pavements, the parks and the public beach – before finally moving into the refuge.


[img]https://ix.cnn.io/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/23.jpg[/img]
[color=#777]Lea Ghorayeb addresses migrant workers from Sierra Leone in the makeshift shelter she and six other friends helped establish in Beirut following Israeli strikes on the southern suburbs of the capital in Lebanon. Oliver Marsden[/color]

Lea Ghorayeb and six other friends saw the West African women sleeping in the open on the public beach on September 28 and decided to help. At first, they tried to find them space in an official shelter but after two days they said the women were kicked out. Following this, the seven friends rented the warehouse space for two months and began fundraising for supplies. A makeshift kitchen has been erected in one corner and clothes drying lines strung up in another.

“The operation is becoming a bit more difficult every day, but we are trying to find solutions,” Ghorayeb explained. “The women want to go home to Sierra Leone. We are trying to reach their embassy, but it hasn’t worked yet. Since the flights are becoming a bit tricky, we might have to get them a boat somewhere and then fly them home.”

In visits to two shelters in Beirut, almost all the Sierra Leonean women CNN spoke to said that they felt abandoned by their consulate.

Samir Bahoun, the consulate office manager tasked with issuing emergency travel documentation, told CNN that the consulate only deals with the employers or associations trying to help the women.

“The employers of domestic workers or the associations trying to help them should pay for their tickets,” he said over the phone. “Usually, our consulate only deals with the employers themselves. The employer should come to consulate with the citizen.”

This policy leaves women who have been abandoned by their employers with no recourse.


[img]https://ix.cnn.io/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/20241008-fngfgng_super4x3.jpg[/img]
[color=#778]A migrant worker from Sierra Leone takes the opportunity to charge her phone in a makeshift shelter in Beirut on Sunday, October 6. (Right) Asha Mohammad Basin, 29, from Ethiopia, clutches her four-month-old baby Amir in a makeshift shelter established in a convent near to Ghosta on Monday, October 7. Oliver Marsden[/color]

In a small park in downtown Beirut, now home to displaced families from Ethiopia, Bangladesh and Syria, tents and blankets have been hung from trees and bushes in an attempt to block out the elements. Children ran over to volunteers as they arrived with boxes full of juice cartons, harried fathers talking on their mobile phones before the batteries died.

Dara Foi’elle of Migrant Workers Action, a grassroots organisation that provides support for the migrants and advocates for fair immigration and labour laws, told CNN that domestic workers in Lebanon faced a “dire” situation.

“Many of the migrant workers lived in the areas that are now being hit,” she said. “We are now focussing our attention on migrants that have been rejected from government shelters.”

Even if the migrant worker’s home countries were able to charter flights like many of their rich and middle-income counterparts have done, Foi’elle told CNN that for many migrant workers, especially domestic workers and those whose residence papers have now expired, it might not be so easy. To leave Lebanon after your visa has expired, Foi’elle explained, you need to pay an overstay fee. This, she said, can be as much as “several hundred dollars.”

Nestled in the mountains one thousand metres above Beirut sits the quiet village of Ghosta. Perched at the end of a single lane road, looking out towards the sea, the Nuns of the Charity Convent has been transformed into a makeshift shelter.

The shelter in the clouds seems a world away from the capital, even though black smoke from the daily airstrikes can be seen rising above the southern part of the city.

[img]https://ix.cnn.io/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/ollie-pic-convent-scaled.jpg[/img]
[color=#777]Migrant workers make sandwiches in the communal kitchen of a makeshift shelter established in a convent near to Ghosta on Monday, October 7 Oliver Marsden[/color]

Men, women and children from Ethiopia, Sudan and Sri Lanka, who fled the fighting in Southern Lebanon, all live together and many of them cannot go back to homelands also decimated by recent or on-going conflict.

The shelter is managed by Migrant Services and Development, a local non-governmental organization, and it currently houses 74 displaced migrant workers and their families.

In the corner of a first-floor room, Asha Mohammad Yasin, 29, from Ethiopia holds her 4-month-old son Amir. Sitting beside her, her husband Khalid Abdullah Daoud feeds their twin daughter Amira formula from a bottle.

Two weeks ago, the couple were forced to flee their home in the village of Kafra in south Lebanon, 5km from the border with Israel, as the Israeli bombing campaign surged in ferocity. They escaped by car to the southern city of Sidon where they slept in the doorway of an abandoned home. Despite the horrors of what they have seen, they know they are lucky to have found their way to the convent. But, like the plumes of black smoke in the distance, the uncertainty about theirs and their children’s future continues to loom large.

“We saw a lot of bombing, destroyed buildings. We saw people burning inside their cars,” Mohammad Yasin recounted, arms wrapped around her baby. “We are safe now, but we are not happy. We don’t know where we will go.”

https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/asequals/kafala-system-migrants-lebanon-war-as-equals-intl-cmd/
Foreign AffairsRe: Vladimir Putin Meets With Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian by CodeTemplarr: 12:57am On Oct 12, 2024
Two desperate men.
PoliticsRe: Pump Price Hike: Tinubu Given Wrong Advice – Ndume by CodeTemplarr: 12:35am On Oct 12, 2024
Deregulation is not an advice. It was signed n sealed by the constitution that gives Ndume immunity.
Christianity EtcRe: I’ve Never Earned Wages From Covenant University – Bishop Oyedepo by CodeTemplarr: 12:31am On Oct 12, 2024
Namaster:
This is just SEMANTICS to deceive ignorant people.

The reward for business/entrepreneurship is PROFIT. He may NOT be drawing wages but Covenant University is still a business that makes CRAZY profit.

The virtue-signalling is UNNECESSARY. Adds NOTHING to the conversation.

It's a WORLD-CLASS institution and the students pay DEARLY for it.

It's not a CHARITY.
$650 leaves them with profit right? You are extremely intelligent sir.
EducationRe: 25% Bag First Class At Covenant Varsity 11th October 2024 by CodeTemplarr: 4:10pm On Oct 11, 2024
LordIsaac:
Yes. If they all worked for it. What am I saying sef, it is impossible to bag first class without work anywhere on earth. Quote me daily!
i mean the emphasis on making a firstclass. After that, what next?
FoodRe: Can You Buy This Mini Spaghetti by CodeTemplarr: 4:00pm On Oct 11, 2024
How many grams i weight?
CelebritiesRe: Diddy's Mom Janice Combs, 84, Wears Fur Jacket And Blingy Glasses To Court After by CodeTemplarr: 2:50pm On Oct 11, 2024
Oyiboyi of Atlanta supporting Koledowo..lol.
AgricultureRe: Wonder Pawpaw Tree With 11 Branches Full Of Fruits In Edo State! by CodeTemplarr: 1:37pm On Oct 11, 2024
Yet people go begin deny witchcraft because of wireless nature.
I neva sèe such pawpaw tree before o.
EducationRe: 25% Bag First Class At Covenant Varsity 11th October 2024 by CodeTemplarr:
Is this really a good indicator of quality? Well, congratulation to them.
FoodRe: This Plate Of Rice And Beans Is ₦700 In Kaduna (Photo, Video) by CodeTemplarr: 1:27pm On Oct 11, 2024
One cup each. They tried.
PoliticsRe: Female Soldier, Ruth Ogunleye Begs For Case Review (Video) by CodeTemplarr: 1:15pm On Oct 11, 2024
Ikaeniyan0:
There's a reason she's making a U-turn
A very strong one. The reason trillions in defence budget feels like pure water allowance in impact level.
EducationRe: Aefunai Ranks 4th In 2024 Times Higher Education Impact Ranking by CodeTemplarr: 1:13pm On Oct 11, 2024
Good for them.
EducationRe: First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu Donates ₦‎1 Billion For OAU Landscaping by CodeTemplarr: 1:12pm On Oct 11, 2024
The perfect way to conceal a bribe. What sort of landscaping are we looking at for God's sake?

I know OAU has impressive landmass but what sort of landscaping is in view here?
PoliticsRe: Pray For Your Leaders, Don’t Curse Them – Sultan Of Sokoto Tells Nigerians by CodeTemplarr: 9:42am On Oct 11, 2024
Double FP promotion of one news.
AutosRe: Elon Musk Unveils New Tesla's Cyber Cab (photos) by CodeTemplarr: 9:07am On Oct 11, 2024
Hmmm
EducationRe: China Unveils The Ultimate Battery: 50 Years Without Recharge! by CodeTemplarr: 7:18am On Oct 11, 2024
Some inventions can render so many things obsolete. This is one of such inventions. Imagine fossil fuels, solar farms, windmill farms, batteries, and biofuels all being relegated by one invention.
FamilyRe: How Are Families Coping Under This Government? by CodeTemplarr: 6:06am On Oct 11, 2024
God1000:
Imagine a family of 5 to 10 children eating everyday in this Tinubu's era, it won't be easy at all

This is apart from School fees, house rent and other miscellaneous

Fuel price has gone up again which will further affect food prices in the market, where are we heading to?
Spiritiual money.

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