Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 6:05pm On May 03, 2022 |
The connection was really far from me. youngcizza: how far boss... link me up with your connect na I'm also in Jos |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 6:04pm On May 03, 2022 |
Thank you sir. Even though I am in touch with a staff in the DG office and she said there's no problem, I should chill Medianna: To me it still important to get in touch with few staff. Maybe people you did documentation or just anyone that will have the information. Govt job sometimes the apl letter is not the problem but the follow up. |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 3:11pm On May 03, 2022 |
Thank you Bros. I have done my documentation including IPPIS capture. The problem is that I am in Jos, and the job is in Abuja. Medianna: You did not mention the nature of the job. But that's fine Base on my experience you should not wait for them to call you first. That was how I missed documentation Start visiting the working place regular to know what's up.( security men are well informed more than some staff) The only difference is I didn't have any delay in salary |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 4:02pm On May 01, 2022 |
Pls what of someone who has collected Apl in February? Does the embargo still apply Tuffa001: .......and also federal tertiary institutions (FTI) too, but the embargo will be lifted anytime soon from insider. |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 8:36pm On Apr 30, 2022 |
Pls gentlemen I need a guide here. Is Apl a guarantee of job? I am asking because I recieved apl in February + ippis done, but I have not been given date to resume, or salary. Experienced input please |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 8:41pm On Apr 26, 2022 |
Please guys, I got my apl in February, ippis and documentation done since then. Any idea when payment or resumption starts?
|
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 5:19pm On Apr 26, 2022 |
|
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 7:45am On Apr 26, 2022 |
They pay from the date of appointment? princetunex: Dem backdate am... too much money |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 4:51pm On Apr 25, 2022 |
Gentlemen, please I need information about the take home pay of an FG staff on CONUASS 1step 1. Thanks guys |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 9:30pm On Apr 23, 2022*. Modified: 9:20pm On Apr 27, 2022 |
Nigerian law school has been recruiting since Last year, but APL was given in January/February this year and most people have done documentation and IPPIS. If you are lucky, someone may have given ur name for a dying minute slot. Can you please reach me on ahmadmg: Seeing this reminds me, someone called me last week asking if I've gotten a text and i answered no and he said he'll get back to me and ended the call, so i searched the number on truecaller and it showed a name with AGF initials. Anyway I was confused so i called the guy back and asked who he was and he said he's calling from Abuja, Nigerian law school, that he'll get back to me, so i said okay �, up till now he hasn't called back. So guys what do you think? Is Nigerian law school recruiting? Could it be someone submitted my CV? |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 9:49pm On Apr 22, 2022 |
Please do you have Idea how much graduate assistant are paid in Nigerian law school? Munamoqel: it's very difficult to even have an appointment with the AGF it takes some time 3 months to have a 15minutes conversation with him like I told you I have plenty people looking up to me and getting govt jobs is becoming a night mare and we had to fix some of our people in Dangote fertilizer . everything thing is even luck now my daughter CV is still with NSA for over 11 Months Notting yet .so it practically impossible for me now sorry . |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 9:44pm On Apr 22, 2022 |
Pls do you have any information about Nigerian law school? kzubyar: like 3 people I knew have resume works in CAC |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Monthly Net Salary Of Federal Government Ministries,departaments, Agencies And P by Danat: 9:28pm On Apr 22, 2022 |
Good evening house. Please any idea how much the take home pay of a graduate assistant at Nigerian Law school? I hear their pay is good. |
Politics › Re: POWER WILL NOT LEAVE THE NORTH IN THE NEXT THREE DECADES ~ SANUSI by Danat: 8:19pm On Apr 22, 2022 |
This is not written by Sanusi BJanta: Your analysis and observations are absolutely true .But if you remember the uncontrollable crisis that followed the annulment of June 12 presidential election results that made Babangida to flee, you would agree that it's ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE. If it could not happen under a military regime headed by a man of no-less sinister personality than Buhari , it has an infinitely less likelihood of happening now. DeltaFire: POWER WILL NOT LEAVE THE NORTH IN THE NEXT THREE DECADES By Muhammad Lamido Sanusi Newspot Nigeria April 21, 2022
..…Bola Tinubu made political miscalculation in 2015 to support Buhari
“As it concerns the 2023 presidency, it should be clear to anyone with a functioning brain that President Buhari’s North has no intention of relinquishing power to the South-West or any zone for that matter. What many may not have realised, however, is that for the next three decades at least, if ever, and should Nigeria remain one, power will not leave the North. But in projecting, one must always leave space for the law of unintended consequences and the God factor. “
The godfather of Lagos politics, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in 2015 led the South-West into an alliance with the North to birth the All Progressive Alliance (APC). His decision, evidently, was informed by the expectation that the two geopolitical regions will share power, invariably to the exclusion of the Eastern bloc. And ultimately that he, or the South-West, will take power by the time the North completes two terms in 2023. But it has proved to be a miscalculation.
Certainly, power play is about conspiracies and alliances. Tinubu is well within his right to do what he thought would best advance his political interest and that of his region. However, in backing President Muhammadu Buhari, he cut his nose to spite his face.
It may not have seemed obvious to many, but once Buhari took power in 2015, Tinubu’s political career was in jeopardy.
To navigate the presidency without bruises, the best Tinubu could have done was to retire from active politics and assume the role of an elder statesman. He did not, he stayed on, wanting to be president and pushing hard to remain at the centre of political discourse. But power is jealous, and if there is any holder of the highest office in the land who would tolerate a co-president, it is not Buhari. Things are beginning to unravel, fast.
Without Tinubu, and by extension the South-West, Buhari could not have been president today. This is one fact that president’s men who now dominate the political space and brook no opposition will hate to admit, but it remains true, regardless.
But being essentially Buhari’s kingmaker, it was political naivety to decide to hang around in the expectation that he would share power. The old Machiavellian advice is that the prince must first destroy the one who made him king. Reason? Because he could decide tomorrow to make another king.
Writing in The Prince, the legendary Niccolo Machiavelli noted “…he who is the cause of another becoming powerful is ruined; because that predominancy has been brought about by astuteness or else by force, and both are distrusted by him who has been raised to power.”
Of course, it should have been obvious that, in helping to make Buhari president, Tinubu was jeopardizing his political career and plunging the South-West, and by extension Southern Nigeria, into political slavery whose only parallel in the country’s political history is the late Emeka Ojukwu leading the Igbo to war in 1967.
With respect to the Biafra War, blaming Ojukwu for embarking on it could earn one exile in the Igbo country. But if truth be told, the war was avoidable and could have been avoided if Ojukwu had not been too stiff to listen to the likes of Zik and other intellectuals who understood better, international politics and diplomacy. This is not to say, nonetheless, that Ojukwu was not sufficiently provoked by the killings of the Igbo in the North in the aftermath of the July 1966 revenge coup that threw up Yakubu Gowon as head of state, and indeed the actions – or lack of it – of the Gowon-led federal side. Regardless, it was still in his hands to accept to fight or toe the path of diplomacy which, given the circumstances, was the best option and the only way to win international support for his secession quest. In the event, he went to war and only succeeded in sacrificing more Igbo lives and weakening the Igbo politically.
The consequence of that weakening is that it provided fertile ground for the emergence of hegemonic Northern power. The imbalance so created is largely responsible for the crisis of Nigeria’s national identity. One mistake many Nigerians, particularly in the South, make is the assumption that the country is already formed and settled as a secular state. It’s not the case. There is the ever present quest to define the country right, of course, from the 1804 jihad.
Colonial rule put a stop to it, then in the post-war years, the Middle Belt soldiers who dominated the army acted as a wedge. Tinubu’s alliance with Buhari has served to reenact that quest. Buhari is now, apparently, out to define the country. The Jagaban’s political miscalculation could yet prove too costly.
The old generals who, I reckon, understand this are already raising the alarm. But of course, the horde of naive, ignorant online crowd of crumb eaters are blurring the resistance line.
As it concerns the 2023 presidency, it should be clear to anyone with a functioning brain that President Buhari’s North has no intention of relinquishing power to the South-West or any zone for that matter. What many may not have realised, however, is that for the next three decades at least, if ever, and should Nigeria remain one, power will not leave the North. But in projecting, one must always leave space for the law of unintended consequences and the God factor.
But given Buhari’s antecedents, was there any grounds for the South-West, particularly, to have given him benefit of the doubt in 2015? Absolutely none in my reckoning. However, it would appear that emotion rather than sound political calculation informed their support for Buhari in 2015. It was, perhaps, more to spite the East than love for Buhari. I had been amazed when, in the heat of the moment in 2015, before the election, the news editor of my then media platform branded a fellow reporter who didn’t buy into the Buhari presidential project a “bloody b*stard who is following the Igbo people to betray Yoruba by supporting Jonathan.”
In the lead up to the 2019 polls, I had on several occasions engaged my landlord – a backer of Buhari’s second term project who loves to discuss politics with me – on who between Atiku Abubakar and the President would make a better leader. My insistence was, of course, that Atiku would. After we exhausted all manner of issues he raised against the former vice president, he said finally that he would still back Buhari because Atiku was an “Omo Igbo project” and that “after Buhari, Yoruba will take power and after Yoruba, Hausa will take power again.” According to him, “we will be rotating it like that, Igbo people will never smell that place.” I had more of pity for his ignorance.
When in 2003, Buhari joined presidential race, he did so, apparently, to stop the then president, Olusegun Obasanjo. Not because Obasanjo had performed badly as president, having taken power with the return of democracy in 1999, but because Buhari and the section of the North he represented believed that power had to return to the region.
In settling for Obasanjo in 1998/99, the intention of the Northern military class was for him to do four years as compensation for MKO Abiola – the Yoruba had become uncontrollably agitated – and hand power back to the North. But not long after Obasanjo took power, it became clear that he was never going to leave it for anybody. This realisation led to agitations; criticisms of the Obasanjo government was swift in the north, the climax of which was the Sharia crisis of 2000. To take power, however, the anti-Obasanjo forces in the North knew that ultimately, it was about going to challenge him at the polls. Buhari emerged as the arrow head of that challenge. And through speeches and actions that appealed to regional sentiments, he built a cult following that saw him win elections convincingly in the North right from 2003.
Until 2014/15, Buhari was a regional hero who believed he could become president by winning elections in the North and never thought seriously about campaigning in the South. However, in 2014/15, the Tinubu led South-West gave him an undeserved national platform, and through heavy media propaganda, dressed him in the robe of a born again democrat. But old habits die hard.
Once in power, Buhari did not hesitate to take off the borrowed garb of a nationalist and democrat to put on his original robe of sectionalism. Right from his first set of appointments, he made clear his intentions. And as it stands, he has completely consolidated power in the hands of the North.
Buhari is an idealogue; usually idealogues are very resolute and persistent people. Say what you will, he is doubling down on nepotism. Shout ‘Fulanisation’ or ‘Islamisation’ all you will, he will only look for a hate speech bill or social media bill to shut you up rather than re-examine his ‘hate’ policies.
Possibly, when Buhari is done with the country – if he has his way – no Southerner will, on the basis of an election, ever become president except at the behest of the North. By suppressing votes in the South and inflating figures in the North, the administration is only trying to establish a pattern – a dangerous pattern which supporters of his party in the South are evidently too blind to see.
It is clear to the discerning where the president is headed. But the question is whether he would succeed. I had pointed out elsewhere that the project would fail, ultimately, because Nigerians are too many to be subjugated.
It would seem, from the actions of those controlling the levers of power, that there is an attempt to precipitate a national crisis with a view to using force to take over the country. But, of course, this is a country of 200 million people. The advantage those who have a “legitimate” right to bear arms are enjoying at the moment would be lost if there is a total breakdown of law and order. And the country would break into fractions controlled by warlords, such that it would take a miracle to have it again as one stable country for anyone to control.
*By Sanusi Muhammad.*
https://newspotng.com/power-will-not-leave-the-north-in-the-next-three-decades-by-muhammad-lamido-sanusi/ |
|
Romance › Re: Man Spoilt By His Girlfriend Shows Off All She Bought For Him As He Advises Othe by Danat: 10:31pm On Mar 25, 2019 |
...
|
Autos › Re: Registered Golf 3 Forsale(2 Doors) by Danat: 9:23am On Mar 25, 2019 |
How much nw? |
Romance › Re: Why Do Girls Keep Smiling And Acts Crazy After A Good Sex by Danat: 9:12am On Mar 25, 2019 |
This one thinks he has impressed
|
Computers › I Need A Good Laptop In Kaduna Or Zaria by Danat(op): 8:24am On May 08, 2017 |
Please anyone who has, or knows someone who has a good system within K.D or ZAria. should please hit me up @ 08176344155 Atleast 4gb ram |
Autos › Re: Get A Good And Very Clean Cars From Cotonou @ Affordable Price by Danat: 3:19pm On Aug 08, 2016 |
[color=#990000][/color] do you have 20th century vokkswagen beetle? Please reply |