CraigB's Posts
Nairaland Forum › CraigB's Profile › CraigB's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 138 139 140 141 142 143 (of 143 pages)
all4naija: It is not important if your English sentence is correct but the reference top monkeys is perfect and quite apt. I agree with it.Mooi. |
Cusubaba: Lazy rapist dog. Apartheid ratJungle noises. |
6000 Nigerians In Foreign Jails Over Drug Offences ABUJA – (Vanguard) Director-General, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, Mr Femi Ajayi, said over 6,000 Nigerians were serving various jail terms across the globe for drug related offenses. Ajayi told the Abike Dabiri-Erewa-led House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora Matters in Abuja that Nigeria had more of its nationals in prisons outside the country than any other African country.
|
all4naija: The correct sentence is - "We are monkeys"You got that right! |
700 Nigerians in Thai prisons, others dead By Johnbosco Agbakwuru Calabar—Bishop Frank Owali of the World Overseer of Hebron-Harvest International Ministry, with headquarters in Bangkok, Thailand, has raised alarm over alleged hostile treatment and harassment of Nigerians by the authorities of Thailand. The cleric, who fled the country, alleged that at the time of his departure no fewer than 700 Nigerians have been arrested and clamped into detention in various towns in and around Bangkok. He said there were no effort by officials of Nigerian Embassy in the country to wade in the matter.
|
500 Nigerians In Brazil Jails Written By CKN NIGERIA on Saturday, 18 May 2013 | 7:09 am Nigeria’s Ambassador to Brazil, Mr. Vincent Okoedion, said there are over 500 Nigerians serving jail terms in Brazil for drug peddling and related offences, affirming that many Nigerians are residing in the country without proper documentation . Ambassador Okoedion , who disclosed this in an interview in Brasilia while meeting officials of Air Air, who were in the country to secure traffic rights from the Brazilian authorities to commence flights. |
1000 NIGERIANS ROT IN CHINA JAILS By SUNDAY ANI Anger, frustration, disillusionment, disenchantment and bitterness enveloped them. They look hapless, dejected and melancholic. They are crying for justice from far away china. They are friends and relations of Nigerians who are languishing in various prisons across the Asian country of China for offences ranging from illegal entry, expired travel documents to narcotics-related cases. |
patriot4: Which is why even after apartheid your people still act like dogs, white or black.Jungle noises. |
Educated and using silver like an English gentleman. Still a monkey!
|
400 Nigerians In South African Prisons – Group Posted by Orient Daily on May 27, 2013 in News | Comments Off |
patriot4: http://www.bet.com/news/national/2012/03/20/survey-nigerians-most-educated-in-the-u-s.htmlVok. You can take the gorilla out of the jungle. But you cannot take the jungle out of the gorilla. |
all4naija: Oh! It is clear you are Afrikaner. It is clearer you don't understand English language."It is clear you don't understand the English language." Chimpooonzeee! |
500 Nigerians in India jails Editorial Wednesday, February 8, 2012 THE Nigerian High Commissioner to In- dia, Mr Oyebola Kuku, while receiving members of the House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora, led by Honourable Abike Dabiri-Erewa, expressed his concern over the increasing population of Nigerian in jails in India. |
The rise of the apes! |
patriot4: No you usually get f**ked in the a$$ by boers or by an other South african rapist, or you keep barcking with you dog familly. waf waf.As if monkeyface knows who I am. |
We can only speculate about the motives of the Nigerian over-achiever turned criminal. The culture from which he springs is notorious for corruption and non-existent business ethics, even by African standards. The openness and innocence of the U.S. way of doing things presents an irresistible appeal to the newcomer from a society where corner-cutting is a way of life. One indicted Nigerian bad check artist told investigators ithat Nigerian students are forced into crime to pay their bills. He held the U.S government responsible for Nigerian crime because 'immigration regulations prevent students from working and scholarship payments are slow coming from Nigeria.' Sommer blame the US for your own monkeying around. |
patriot4: What, will you soon start saying all russians are criminals ?I don't get spoken to. |
"Logos no be good. Too mash wahala. Wettin yu sey we dey go to Amelikka"?
|
all4naija: You are talking about the crimes Nigerians are committing around the world while you forget that South Africans are known to be world worst criminals. It is funny how you go about it from a single perspective though.Monkeys talking now? |
all4naija: What is broken English? In you sentence you didn't add a suffix of the indefinite article 'a' to your broken English.An American English! Ha! Planet of the apes! Do you want a water now? To wash down an American English? Jou poes! |
The Nigerian Crime Network By David Simcox Volume 3, Number 3 (Spring 1993) Issue theme: "A land of opportunity: crime and immigration" As many as 100,000 Nigerians are now in the United States. Nearly half of them originally entered the United States with nonimmigrant (temporary) foreign student visas. Citing Nigerian sources, U.S. law enforcement officials estimate that 75 to 90 percent of them have been involved in an impressive and innovative variety of fraud schemes, often using extensive Nigerian networks across the country. Nigerian crime in 1989 was estimated to cost the United States $1 billion. Law enforcement officials consider New York and Houston the hubs of Nigerian criminal activity, with significant problems also existing in Atlanta, New Orleans, Los Angeles and the Washington-Baltimore area. The Nigerian mafia is well organized and sophisticated. Investigators have uncovered 'classes' where earlier Nigerian settlers train newcomers to the U.S. in the subtle arts of credit card, banking and insurance fraud and keep up to date on new techniques. Police have discovered phony Nigerian companies that exist only to reply to credit inquiries and provide references and employment confir-mation. A network of cells of three to fifteen members each have been found. Each cell of 'boys' usually has an identifiable leader who acts as recruiter and trainer of new members, most of whom are found on college campuses. Unlike traditional organized crime, however, Nigerian organizations make no territorial claims, are highly mobile, and display no clear hierarchy. Here are some of the Nigerian mafia's most common, and most lucrative, criminal practices |
collynzo2: Even a broken clock is right twice a day. Thats 2 times more than you.We have ourselves an English gentleman here. Maar 'n bobbejaan is nog 'n bobbejaan. |
all4naija: An is a indefinite article use to indicate the type of reference being made by Noun. Not including it in my sentence doesn't make it to be wrong. I just proved it to have a connotation. You airhead."Gibberish is English word" is broken English. Friggin Kunta Kente. |
Family.
|
collynzo2: You need to learn how to multi- task........................I mean write and make sense at the same time.' Writing lessons from a friggin zoo. Jou ma! |
Most of these syndicates operate from Johannesburg, but some have recently moved into more distant areas such as Sea Point in Cape Town. The individuals belonging to each of the many small syndicates each have their specific tasks and expertise. When cocaine supplies need to be acquired from South America, each member of a syndicate would have to make a financial contribution into a common fund for the syndicate. The network of Nigerian cocaine syndicates is well-established enough to know when other Nigerian syndicates have gone through the same exercise and when the time is therefore ripe to obtain another shipment of cocaine from abroad. Representatives from different small syndicates, normally the buyers from each syndicate, will then meet, pool their resources, and arrange for one individual to take over the responsibility of obtaining a shipment of cocaine from South America. The Nigerian syndicates have direct contacts in Brazil and in other South American countries. Most transactions are paid for in cash, although it has happened that such syndicates have resorted to the export of South African dagga in order to pay for cocaine. Upon arrival in South Africa, the cocaine would be divided proportionally amongst all the syndicates who have contributed financially to the particular venture. No single, large mafia-like Nigerian syndicate is therefore operating in the country and no ‘Mr Big’ has been identified among the Nigerian crime syndicates. The enormous profits that can be made through cocaine smuggling make for a very competitive environment, but there is more than enough opportunity for every syndicate involved to make vast profits. Detectives who have intimate experience of Nigerian syndicates, after having worked with them, maintain that the going purchase price for one kilogram of pure cocaine was $12 500 in South America (cocaine of maximum purity is 90 per cent pure). According to the police, once the cocaine has arrived in South Africa and it has been sold by a syndicate after significantly diluting its concentration, the original one kilogram, now in its diluted form, is sold for $100, 000. While some overhead expenses will have to be deducted, it is clear that enormous profits are being made through this form of transnational organised crime. According to the police, members of the Nigerian syndicates who receive their share of the profits, tend to send most of their proceeds back to Nigeria rather than investing it in South Africa |
"Wettin say about Hillbrow? Chop dey dollar? Yes, yes mo brodda. Chop dey dollar!"
|
all4naija: Gibberish is English wordEnglish word describing what you speak. "Gibberish is an English word". Now, that's English, jou poes. |
Monkeys pissing in the wind.
|
Nigerian Crime Syndicates Nigerian crime syndicates, often considered by law enforcement officers as 'organized crime', have gained a certain international notoriety, particularly in the fields of drugs and fraud. Nigerian groups are famous globally and operate in more than 80 other countries of the world. Their financial frauds just in the US alone cost an estimated $1 billion to $2 billion each year. Schemes are diverse, targeting individuals, businesses, and government offices. Criminal organizations from Nigeria typically do not follow the mafia-type model followed by other groups. They appear to be less formal and more organized along familial and ethnic lines, thus making them less susceptible by infiltration from law enforcement. Police investigations are further hampered by the fact there are at least 250 distinct ethnic languages in Nigeria. Other criminal gangs from Nigeria appear to be smaller-scale freelance operations. Most Nigerian organized crime syndicates are of Igbo or Yoruba origin. Nigerian criminal groups are heavily involved in drug trafficking, shipping heroin from Asian countries to Europe and America; and cocaine from South America to Europe and South Africa. The large numbers of ethnic Nigerians in India, Pakistan, and Thailand give their gangs ready access to around 90% of the world's heroin. In the United States, Nigerian drug traffickers are important distributors of heroin, from importing it into the country to distribution level and selling it to lower-lever street gangs.
|
all4naija: What is Voetsek? Get lost in Afrikaner! Lol, you Bamboo! This is English forum, you i-d-i-o-t!Then speak English. Stop speaking gibberish. |
Dirty deal: Outrage as UK author lists “Nigerians” as international criminal gang in his book Posted By TheScoop on March 28, 2013 by Stanley Azuakola A British author and anti-fraud specialist, Peter Lilley, is being called out by Nigerians over his wilful ignorance or deliberate mischief when he listed “Nigerians” as an international organised criminal gang in his book which was edited and published by a supposedly international publishing house. In the book “Dirty Dealing – The Untold Truth about Global Money Laundering, International Crime and Terrorism,” Lilley did a grouping of international organised criminal gangs. Here was how he listed them: · Nigerians It's always "mischief". Yeah, right! |