Doncent12's Posts
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That's Mr paul the quality control guy...I worked with him closely when i was with IvM. Good man. |
Please, don't mind this guys. I run an automobile service center. Use what your manufacturer recommended. They probably were usuing a fake quality or cheap oil. timbs001: |
Can you tell us the quality of 5w-20/30 you used? Because I have been using them for many years now and my car have been running so smoothly. Even people I recommend it to have never complained. You must have been using a false quantlity and cheap brand. The blend of those oils were done by the manufacturers to withsatnd any heat and cushion the pinions and gears sustainably. You can't know more the manufacturers. That our Nigerian problem. xcitedjay: |
So whar is the suprise about then? She already knows the trad is in a weeks time? VampireeM: |
I came home yesterday and spread my camp mat on my balcony to enjoy my browsing solitude moment. I plugged my phone to my power bank and after a while, I noticed the map beneath me was begloted. I tried to find a cause, but kept arriving at nothing. I woke up this morning and took my power bank to charge and I noticed a burn or scald-like effect on my powerbank. I think the power bank interracted with the camp mat to bring up those reactions Please, is this one of those powerbank burning type of story? Who has an explanation?
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I got home Yesterday night, and relaxed on a camp mat I just got to browse with my phone. The phone was connected to a power bank and something I can't still explain happened. After a while, I noticed a begloted portion of the mat a and was baffled because that begloted portion was never there before. I couldn't figure out the cause until this morning when I took out my power bank to charge, I noticed a something like a 'burnt' side or scalded portion! I have read powerbanks killing people. Is this one of those similar incidence ![]() Please, who can explain this?
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Facebook responded to the fake status on Wednesday, saying: “You may have seen a post telling you to copy and paste a notice to retain control over things you share on Facebook. Don’t believe it. You own your content and can control how it is shared through your privacy settings.” Facebook is not making all your posts public, so publishing any kind of legal notice on your Facebook page or profile is totally baseless. The only way to change your privacy settings is to adjust them yourself in the account settings on Facebook and practice caution when you post to the Web. The below message posted by many on Facebook is fake, so copying and publishing such claims is not going to save you or anyone else. Message: All your posts can become public tomorrow . Even the messages that have been deleted or the photos not allowed. After all, it does not cost anything for a simple copy and paste Better safe than sorry is right. Channel 13 News was just talking about this change in Facebook’s privacy policy. Better safe than sorry. I do not give Facebook or any entities associated with Facebook permission to use my pictures, information, messages or posts, both past and future. By this statement, I give notice to Facebook it is strictly forbidden to disclose, copy, distribute, or take any other action against me based on this profile and/or its contents. The content of this profile is private and confidential information. The violation of privacy can be punished by law (UCC 1-308- 1 1 308-103 and the Rome Statute). NOTE: Facebook is now a public entity. All members must post a note like this. If you prefer, you can copy and paste this version. If you do not publish a statement at least once it will be tactically allowing the use of your photos, as well as the information contained in the profile status updates. DO NOT SHARE. You must copy n paste. Facebook message hoax This not the first time users are posting such hoax or fake notices. According to Snopes, messages about protecting your copyright or privacy rights on Facebook by posting a particular legal notice to your wall are all variants of an item circulated several years ago. The item posited that posting a similar notice on a website would protect that site’s operators from prosecution for piracy. In both cases, the claims are erroneous, an expression of the mistaken belief that using some simple legal talisman — knowing enough to ask the right question or post a pertinent disclaimer — will immunize one from some undesirable legal consequence. The law just doesn’t work that way. Here is the full text of Facebook’s data usage policy “We collect the content and other information you provide when you use our Services, including when you sign up for an account, create or share, and message or communicate with others. This can include information in or about the content you provide, such as the location of a photo or the date a file was created. We also collect information about how you use our Services, such as the types of content you view or engage with or the frequency and duration of your activities. “ http://www.valuewalk.com/2016/06/facebook-posts-public-note/ |
Chantel Okogwu has been missing for weeks without contact with her friends and family. Please, anyone with any useful information can contact this numbers; 0809082092738 or 08068841392. Thanks a lot.
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So you know others were biased before? Our wailing ws justified. ElPadrino33: |
Prince Ebeano supermarket, lekki...The guy is our big customer. youngejump: |
Tiwa is my neighbour... simtosul: |
Remeber Gej has governed the country for 5 years, your buhari spent less than two years jogojogo: |
Your sense is missing...what's hidden about ultimatum? Is it n ot open enough? All these people that are as illetrate as their boo boo Fmartin: |
Issele ukwu!!!! Delta camp...During our time, we don't queue, we arrange the plates and watch from a distance... |
who can argue about this? Lolzz
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NOT SUCH A GOOD FRIDAY FOR EL RUFAI: As he receives one EL sorry Hell of a slap. word making round is that El Rufai climbed a chair and slapped his deputy governor. We hear the deputy governor forgot his Christian teaching of "turn the other cheek" and instead proceeded to place a hot revenge slap on El Rufai's cheek. Now when a 4 ft 9 lightweight man like El Rufai climbs a chair to receive a slap from an angry big man, what do you think happened? We hear he and the chair went down and his bodyguards have rushed El Rufai to the hospital so as to avoid complications from well contagious and communicable SLAPphylococcus. El Rufai's cheek was CRUCIFIED today. hahahahahaha -Ena Ofugara |
if you have sense don't tell them...I was teaching in a private school I schooled ,was close to the owner. I later got a better job as per good boy ,I told the owner and stayed till the exam period finished. Brotherly,till today I have not been paid that salary. That was since 2014. if you love your money, tell them you are leaving after you have been paid. |
YOU MEAN WORKING BY COMMISIONING SHOPRITE? bloodyBLOGGER: |
Auto-Base Express Car Wash now in lekki! A milestone of achivement has been attained as we proudly introduce to you the 1st Automated Drive-through Commercial Car wash in Nigeria. All it takes is 1:20minutes for your car to be glossy clean and sparkling! ...#AUTOBASE.... N1,500 per wash #Free Wax...Vacuum and Underwash @ World Oil Filling Station,Ilasan.After the 4th Round About, Lekki-Epe Expressway, Lekki, Lagos.
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This was what my freind went through in the hands of our police officers... |
Following repeated attacks on Yoruba communities in Lagos by Hausa-Fulani Mob, Yoruba youths have demanded for the immediate dissolution of Nigeria and the creation of Oduduwa Republic Bloody clashes in the Mile 12, Ketu area of Lagos State on Thursday left no fewer than 10 persons dead and about 100 others injured. Among the dead were two schoolchildren, traders, artisans and residents. A two-year-old boy, Andrew Daniel, was abducted by some hoodlums and taken away after his father, Igba, was attacked with machetes and left for the dead. The PUNCH, which witnessed part of the clashes as it unfolded, counted no fewer than 40 vehicles that were either burnt or vandalised in the Agiliti area of Ketu. Two churches and over 20 houses were equally set ablaze and hundreds of residents rendered homeless in Maidan community as a result of the violence which was said to have broken out after a disagreement between some Yoruba and Hausa in the area. http://www.weeklypostng.co/2016/03/breaking-yoruba-youths-protest-demand.html?utm_source=&utm_medium=facebook&m=1
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Despite the decision of the Lagos State government to shut down the popular Mile 12 market as well as declare a curfew in some crisis hotspots, the ethnic clashes in the area continued Friday leaving burnt carcasses of vehicles and buildings in its wake. A gang of youth purportedly belonging to the Hausa ethnic group marched down deserted streets setting ablaze buildings, despite the deployment of armed police officers. At least, four buildings, including a bakery, were burnt on Friday, a witness told PREMIUM TIMES. ”We locked ourselves indoors since morning praying that this killings should end,” said the resident who preferred not to be named. The casualty figure on Friday is still unclear, but, at least, ten people had died by Thursday after crisis erupted in the area the day before. The Lagos State government had responded on Thursday by shutting down the Mile 12 market and declaring a curfew in four streets in the area. “The public is hereby assured that we will not shy away from our responsibilities to protect lives and property, and will deal decisively with those criminal elements who fan embers of ethnic strife,” said Governor Akinwunmi Ambode. Dolapo Badmus, the Lagos State Police spokesperson, told AFP that 105 people had been arrested in connection with the Mile 12 violence. On Friday, the government met with stakeholders from Mile 12 market, Agiliti community, Maidan and its environs to find a lasting solution to the violence. Tunji Bello, the Secretary to the State Government, who presided over the meeting, said all the leaders agreed on the need to co-habit in peace irrespective of their religion, culture or tribes. Mr. Bello urged the leaders to go back and assure their people to maintain the peace, stating that the State Government would consider the inputs of all those present in arriving at a decision. “The issue of disagreement is not new in the area and what is uppermost is that everybody should see the next person as his brother,” Mr. Bello added. Speaking at the meeting, Assistant Commissioner of Police, I.O Edgal who stood in for the Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, said the Police High Command had secured the Agiliti area and its environs and peace had now returned to the community. He said the clash and resultant loss of lives were unfortunate and that going by the level of destruction on ground, they were not commensurate with what was reported to have precipitated the clash. Other participants at the meeting included the Iyaloja of Mile 12 market, Iyabo Ahmed; Baale of Maidan, Baale Ogunjobi; Baale of Agiliti, Jimoh Onikosi; Serikin Nupe, Jibril Magaji; Chairman, Shukura yam, Mohammed Damdana; and Chairman of CDA Central, M.A Showande. http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/199556-lagos-crisis-continues-despite-market-shutdown.html |
Let's hear his part of the story...I don't trust this ladies. |
Could you tell us how your daughter disappeared from Bayelsa? On August 12, being a Tuesday, after we took our breakfast, I went to the market, from where I went to visit one of my relations. By the time I returned home, one of my children was angry and complained that Ese, who went out in the morning had not returned and that she left the house at about 11 o’clock that fateful day. I asked him whether he beat her and he said no. I asked if they had a programme in church and he said no. At that point, I began to get worried and wondered where Ese must have gone. Initially, I thought she had gone to church because they usually go to our neighbour’s church even though we are Anglicans, and I don’t stop them. I then asked him to go and check inside the house if she was sleeping and he did but came to say she was not there. From that point I decided to go and look for her myself. As I was going, one of my daughters told me that they saw the carpenter lying in front of his shop since morning and that Yinusa, who usually came between 12 and 1pm to buy Banga soup from their buka had not shown up that day. At that point, I decided to go and ask the carpenter, for the telephone number of Yinusa and he told me Yinusa does not have a phone and that he usually come to beg him to use his phone to make calls. The carpenter asked me why I was looking for him and I told him that I wanted to charter his Keke, and with that I left his place and went to another shop that he usually patronise to ask for him. When I got there, I asked the owner of the shop, who happens to be a Yoruba woman about Yinusa, and she told me he was not there but that his Keke, had been parked all day. She asked why I was looking for him and I told her I wanted to charter his Keke. After a second thought I decided to open up to her that I was looking for my daughter, Ese. She asked what Ese had to do with Yinusa, and I told her Yinusa had disappeared since morning and my daughter was nowhere to be found. When I left her shop, I went to the mosque where the Hausa boys usually gather to look for Yinusa. They were praying. I decided to wait; I waited for about two hours and got tired and left. I later sent one of my children to go and call one of them. He saw one Mohammed and invited him to my place. I asked him about Yellow and he revealed that he had sold his Keke and travelled to Kano. He was the one who told me that Yinusa, took my daughter along with him and told him he was going to convert her to Islam and marry her. My husband wanted to go and report the matter the police that day, but they begged him not to. I later took her picture to all the police checkpoints in Bayelsa, pleading with them to arrest her if they set their eyes on her. I also went to all the motor parks to distribute the photograph. How did you travel to Kano? I made arrangement for them to take me to Kano, but they said it would not be possible until they heard from Yinusa. Two days later, they called to confirm that he has arrived Kano and that we could travel the next day. The person who saw him and my daughter said he asked my daughter what she was doing in Kano, and he said she didn’t know that it was Yellow that brought her there. I then reported the matter to my husband and he got so angry and blamed the incident on my food business, which has caused and Hausa boy kidnapping his daughter. He said if not that I was selling food, the boy would not have had any access to the girl. My husband wanted to go and report the matter to the police that day but they begged him not to. Before we embarked on the journey to Kano, we were told that the matter has been reported to the chief of the town and they asked me to look for N20, 000 for the trip. They said that N6,000 will take me to Kano, another N12, 000 will take me and my daughter back to Yenagoa, while we keep the remaining N2 ,000, for feeding and local runs. I got the money and embarked on the trip. What happened in Kano? When we arrived Kano, I had to spend the night in the house of the boy that took me there, because we arrived very late in the night at past 12 midnight. The next day, we proceeded on the search for Ese. Before we arrived Kano, I had received a call from my daughter, asking me where we were and I told her we were close to Abuja. She advised me to stop at Abuja and spend the night with my sister, as according to her, they would kill me if I came to Kano that night. She said they had taken her photograph and converted her to Islam and wore her the hijab because the emir, Sanusi, promised them that anybody that brought a Christian girl from another state and converted her to Islam would be rewarded with money, given a house, jeep and earn a salary, among other goodies. She said all the people were celebrating with Yinusa. Still on our way, the man who was taking me to Kano got a call and told me it was Yinusa, but that I should not mind him. In Kano, in the morning, I asked him to take me to the parent of Yellow, but he said we would first go to the house of the chief and that when we get there the chief would hand over my daughter and we would leave Kano the next day. When we got to the chief’s house, the boy narrated why he came with me and the chief was so angry and started abusing him. I knew he was abusing him because he spoke little English and Hausa. At that point, I got on my knees and pleaded with him to help me because my husband had driven me out of the house, asking me never to come back until I produced his daughter. He called me useless woman and asked which child did I keep here, that my child has been converted to Islam and I will never see her again. While we were there, the other Hausa boys, who had stayed in Bayelsa, on hearing the matter, came there to meet me because I was good to them. They made inquiry on how we could get to the emir’s palace and the chief gave us two telephone numbers. When we got there, one of the soldiers on duty, in front of the palace, saw my desperation, as I was trying to call the telephone number given to us. He approached me and asked what I was doing there and after explaining to him, he took pity on me and said I cannot access the palace from the front gate, that I should go through the back, which I did. When I got inside, an elderly man walked to us and asked the boy that came with me if he was the one from Bayelsa, and he answered yes. He then asked why he brought me to Kano. I knelt down to beg him to help me recover my child, that she was only 13. He said it was not possible and that even if I must see her, it had to be on Monday. Before I knew what was happening, young men started to gather in their large number. I started running. They came after me, hitting me and abusing me. They could have killed me. While all these was going on, one God-sent man drove into the palace and rescues me. He called the police and they sent one of their patrol vans to the scene immediately. After rescuing me, they took me to the Kwani police station, close to the palace. I told them my story; they handed me over to the DCO of the station. At the office of the DCO, they took my statement and took it to the DPO. The DPO, on getting the report, then drafted some policemen to the palace. They did not allow us to enter and before we knew it, people started trooping in; so the policemen sensing danger put me back into the vehicle and drove off back to the police station. At the police station, the DPO, them decided that since the matter seemed to be getting out of hand, we should go to the palace of the Galadima. On getting there, they told us he was sleeping and that we cannot see him. From the Galadima, we went to the adviser to the emir’s place and we were again told that he was sleeping; so we decided to go back to the station. On our way, they called to say the Galadima had woken up and that we should come back. When we returned, the policemen told him why they were there, but he drove us away, saying he was not aware of any case of a girl in the palace. On leaving the Galadima, we went to the secretary’s place; that was about seven o’clock in the evening. When we got there, they were praying; so we had to wait and after the prayers, he asked why we were there. The policemen told him and he said he was aware of the matter but that there was nothing he could do because he was traveling and promised to act on it when he returned. It was him that now promised that we should go and come back on Monday and that they would bring the girl on that day. From there we went back to the police station and I was advised not to go back to the village, where I slept because I would be killed. I then pleaded with them to allow me sleep at the station until Monday since I didn’t have any relation in Kano. They said I cannot stay there because the irate youths may come and burn down the station that I should look for a hotel to spend the weekend. However, one of the policewomen offered to accommodate me, so I went with her and stayed with her till Monday when we agreed to meet at 10 in the morning. On Monday, I went back to the station from where some policemen took me to the palace. On getting there, we saw that the whole place was filled with youths, who abused us openly and threatening to attack us. When the police could no longer tolerate the situation, they took me back to the police station and promised to go back when the emir got to the palace. We returned to the police station. They later called to say the emir had arrived the palace and that we should come back. This was at about one o’clock in the afternoon. At the palace, one jeep came with my daughter. There were also two policemen in the vehicle and the chief of Tufa, with another man. The two policemen took my daughter inside. Inside was Yinusa, and my daughter, who they Aisha. They did not allow me inside. The DCO went in and later stormed out in anger, saying he cannot tolerate a situation where the mother of a child would not be allowed to interfere in a matter that concerns her and where she cannot be allowed to go with her daughter. At this point, tension in the palace got very high; so they quickly pushed me into the car and drove off back to the police station. At the police station, the DCO reported back to the DPO and then said with the way the matter was going, he would have to refer me to the state CID. We then proceeded to the state CID, and they took the letter and the statement and said since the case happened in Bayelsa, I would have to come with police personnel from the Bayelsa state command before they could commence investigation. So they advised me to go back to Bayelsa. What was you daughter’s reaction when you finally met this week? She was happy to see me. She recognised me and stood up to greet me when I entered the room where she was kept. Did you notice changes in her behaviour? I have not noticed anything like that yet because we have not really interacted. The only thing is that she asked me about her brothers and sisters back home. She is really looking forward to going home. When did you leave Bayelsa on Tuesday. We left Bayelsa at about nine o’clock in the morning of Tuesday. http://www.sunnewsonline.ng/irate-youths-almost-killed-me-at-emirs-palace-mum/ |
Typical yoruba comment. They don't care to sell their state just to please buhari. Sammyashol: |
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He listed them as a reaction to claims by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo that the Federal Government in the last 10 years did not construct a single road.
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doncent12:Lalasticlala oya front page things o... |


who can argue about this? Lolzz