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PoliticsRe: viviangist please show us a picture of your sister before she died by DickDastardly(m): 6:44pm On Dec 02, 2015
*chuckles* cheesy
PoliticsRe: What Biafra Agitators Should Know Before They Keep Protesting. By Wisdomkosi by DickDastardly(m): 5:04pm On Dec 02, 2015
I just hate violence angry
Jokes Etc. by DickDastardly(op):
tongue tongue

CrimeRe: Wife Of Detainee Loses Pregnancy After Torture By Police (Pictured) by DickDastardly(m): 7:32am On Dec 02, 2015
That picture though, very much semblance with our own irunobo tongue. Igbo women can be ugly o! grin

Seriously that DPO should be made to face brock lesnar in cage fight. Useless idiotic illiterate police gagool
BusinessRe: Onyenewe-Motors: Access Banks Shut In Enugu Due To Lack Of MONEY to pay DEBTOR!! by DickDastardly(m): 7:29am On Dec 02, 2015
Thats my uncle and thats how we roll. We shut down mulla houses when we ride cool

Correction: Name is Onyenwe not onyenewe undecided

Nwa ji nma gbuo agu 1 of Neni cool
PoliticsRe: o by DickDastardly(op): 6:55am On Dec 02, 2015
He said the total comprised of: "Police officers - 305,588; Traffic wardens - 6,541; Civilian supportive staff - 10,876." If 90,000 police officers were to have been killed, this would amount to almost one in three of the active force.

Conclusion: The inspector-general's claim about police deaths is wrong

Addressing the United Nations Assembly in September 2014, Nigeria's then president told the world that around 13,000 people had been killed in the Boko Haram insurgency between 2009 and 2014. Africa Check investigated and found the claim to be broadly correct.

Since then many more people have died. Amnesty International puts the total number of people killed across north-east Nigeria between the start of the insurgency in 2009 and June 2015 at around 17,000.

According to the Nigeria Social Violence Dataset, run by the Johns Hopkins University, 23,888 deaths could be attributed to Boko Haram between 2009 and 2014, but also to communal clashes, Fulani herdsmen invasion, and other forms of violence across the country.

All of these figures - which include soldiers and civilians as well as the police - fall significantly short of the total advanced by the inspector-general. On the basis of the best available evidence, his claim that 90,000 officers had been killed is wrong.

This piece was originally published by Africa Check, a non-partisan organisation that promotes accuracy in public debate and the media. We have their permission to republish.

Source: http://allafrica.com/stories/201512020018.html
PoliticsRe: o by DickDastardly(op): 6:53am On Dec 02, 2015
It is also unclear whether these were women widowed in the past four years. And it is not known whether the widows include those whose husbands died of natural causes or in the line of regular duties.

Africa Check sought clarification from the inspector-general's office of the figures but met a brick wall. Multiple phone calls, text messages and e-mails to the police spokesman, assistant commissioner of police Olabisi Kolawole, went unanswered. (Note: We will update this report if we get a reply.)

What do we know of overall deaths during the insurgency?

In October last year, Africa Check investigated the claim of then President Goodluck Jonathan that around 13,000 people had been killed in the insurgency between 2009 and 2014 and found the claim to be broadly correct.

Since then more people have been killed, of course. According to Amnesty International, a total of 17,000 people have been killed across north-east Nigeria since the Boko Haram insurgency began in 2009.

The Nigeria Social Violence Dataset, run by the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, shows that 33,619 Nigerians were killed in more than 2,300 incidents during ethnic, religious, political, and economic violence across Nigeria between 1998 and the end of 2014. Between the first quarter of 2009 and the last quarter of 2014, 23,888 deaths were attributed to Boko Haram, communal clashes, Fulani herdsmen invasion, and other forms of violence across the six geo-political zones of the country.

All these estimates fall a long way short of the total advanced by the inspector-general for the deaths among the police alone.

What do we know about deaths among the police?

The first thing we know is that from the start of the insurgency in 2009, there have been many cases of militants attacking police stations, particularly in the north east region. One of the first Boko Haram attacks to be widely reported was on a police station in 2009 and since then the attacks against police stations and police personnel have been frequent.

Unfortunately, none of the non-governmental organisations in Nigeria whose activities focus on the police, keeps records of the number of police officers killed since the insurgency started.

But Chino Obiagwu of the Legal Defence and Assistance Project (LEDAP) told Africa Check: "I don't know where [Arase] got the figures [from]. Not even the military claims to have suffered 90,000 casualties."

And Joseph Otteh of Access to Justice said: "I hesitate on that figure because the police have not been at the forefront of the fight against the insurgency."

How many police officers does Nigeria have?

Another way to look at the question is how many police officers Nigeria has, and whether it is plausible that 90,000 could have been lost in the past four years.

In 2012, Caleb Olubolade, then Minister of Police Affairs, put the number of police officers in the country at 370,000. According to AFP correspondent Ola Awoniyi, Arase told the House of Representatives' Committee on Police Affairs on 24 November that the total stood at 323,000 in October, many of whom were support staff.
Politicso by DickDastardly(op):
Nigeria's House of Representatives resolved last Wednesday to investigate claims earlier in the month by Nigeria's inspector-general of police, Solomon Arase, that 90,000 police officers have been "lost" to the Boko Haram insurgency since 2011.

"Based on the figure I have in my disposal, we have 90,000 widows. So invariably, that can be translated to mean that we have lost about 90,000 officers and men since the commencement of the insurgency four years ago," the inspector-general reportedly told police officers in Sokoto on 11 November.

The claim was widely repeated and shocked politicians and commentators. "For us to lose that number of policemen is a monumental loss and very unfortunate," Nasir Ahmed, an All Progressives Congress (APC) representative for Katsina, was quoted saying in the House last week. Ali Patigi, APC representative for Kwara, added: "I will urge that this matter to be thoroughly investigated because losing 90,000 policemen is no mean misfortune for a society."

So is the inspector-general right? Could the Nigerian police really have lost so many men in such a short time? (Even setting aside the fact that the inspector-general is wrong about the time-frame - Boko Haram began its violent insurgency in 2009, and not 2011 as Arase said.)

How did he arrive at the figure?

From what Arase said, the inspector-general of police made seems like a very simple deduction. Because there are "90,000 widows" of police officers, it stands "invariably" that 90,000 officers have been lost in the past four years of insurgency, he said.

The first problem with this claim is that we do not know the source of the data for the number of widows, nor when nor why they were widowed.

Source:
http://allafrica.com/stories/201512020018.html
PoliticsRe: Boko Haram Not Responsible For Kano Blast –zakzaky by DickDastardly(m): 5:56am On Dec 02, 2015
Name who did then, or shut the fvck vp angry cool
PhonesRe: NCC Moves Against Unsolicited SMS By Telcos by DickDastardly(m): 5:53am On Dec 02, 2015
The best news this year if enforced grin
SportsRe: Fifa Admits Bronze Boot Error, Chukwueze Not Nwakali Winner by DickDastardly(m): 6:11pm On Dec 01, 2015
End time FIFA undecided
PoliticsRe: Protesters Block Niger Bridge by DickDastardly(m): 5:16pm On Dec 01, 2015
cool cool
CrimeRe: Man Sends Thugs To Demolish Church For Disturbing Him by DickDastardly(m): 5:15pm On Dec 01, 2015
Mozambique:
Your case cannot be remedied.
Run along ma boy wink
CrimeRe: Man Sends Thugs To Demolish Church For Disturbing Him by DickDastardly(m): 5:11pm On Dec 01, 2015
Mozambique:
Abeg, remove the 's'
Thanks but its correct. I am more bothered with the spelling of your monicker. Thats not the country i know. Is yours in your village? tongue
CrimeRe: Man Sends Thugs To Demolish Church For Disturbing Him by DickDastardly(m): 4:59pm On Dec 01, 2015
I do not join issues with church pipo, lest they tag me possessed grin
*continues minding my business* cool
PoliticsRe: Update: DSS Arrests Dasuki, Bafarawa, Dokpesi In EFCC Net - The Nation by DickDastardly(m): 4:55pm On Dec 01, 2015
The witch hunt goes on grin

Chai baba!
BusinessRe: Nigerians Should Abandon Mtn And Embrace Glo by DickDastardly(m): 4:54pm On Dec 01, 2015
Na who glo hephuh
Na the same pipo ukochukwu tongue
RomanceRe: Nairaland Men Are Too Weak Sexually by DickDastardly(m): 4:43pm On Dec 01, 2015
irunooboo:
i protect myself thanks cool
Ok kiss
PoliticsRe: EFCC Arrest Raymond Dokpesi by DickDastardly(m): 4:43pm On Dec 01, 2015
undecided
PoliticsRe: Has President Buhari Been True To This Campaign Promise? (pic) by DickDastardly(m): 4:40pm On Dec 01, 2015
You already know the answer. angry
RomanceRe: Nairaland Men Are Too Weak Sexually by DickDastardly(m): 4:38pm On Dec 01, 2015
I am more concerned with your HIV status. Go for a test today before its too late, thank me tomorrow. cool

Note: I'm allergic to being quoted. wink
BusinessRe: New Style Of Shoplifting, Shop Owners Beware! by DickDastardly(m): 4:29pm On Dec 01, 2015
[quote][/quote][sup][/sup][s][/s]
Errrrm.. i copied this guy ^^^
wink

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