Edogu's Posts
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Connected1:FUNAI |
malikombi:Be patient, school will soon reopen. Just submitted an application to one school close to me. I'm going through the same rough patches like. Do you attend union Congress. It's by attending such congresses that you know if there’s coping strategy. It's well my bro. God definitely will make way for you. You can as well organise lessons for students or place advert with your number on it. Hopefully, you might find a family that wants you to tutor their kids. Gracia. |
Voldoz:They were not paid their salaries except for non teaching staff. |
malikombi:While waiting for the strike to be called off, why don't you find a nearby school where you can teach. Don't your union have a coping strategy? |
Delta State Government has urged the Leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities ( ASUU) to use Universities in the state as blueprint in correcting deficiency of Universities under its purview. Speaking on Sunday in Asaba, Commissioner of Higher Education, Prof. Patrick Muoboghare described the allegations made by Prof Emmanuel Osodeke, National President of ASUU, who is a Deltan, as fake and unpatriotic. He said that the anger of the leadership of ASUU degenerated from the refusal of the state-owned universities to join the recent strike action. According to Muoboghare, ” Governor Okowa has made it clear that we had no issue with ASUU and that caused a big attack where he made some statement we need to correct. None of this statement is true”. Though he noted that the union has the right to go on strike action, he maintained that the state would not be dragged to fight a war that does not affect its workers. Hence, he charged the leadership of the union to take the blueprint on how the state pays it’s staff while bargaining with the Federal Government. While disregarding claims that there is no pension scheme in Delta, he said, ” That is a lie from the pit of hell. There is a pension scheme in Delta State University, Abraka. What is correct is that the Academic Staff of Delta State University do not have the ASUU pension company as their preferred company. “They staff in Delta State University, Abraka are in the old pension scheme but ASUU expects members of the union to be part of it’s pension company but they will not see us there because we are not on the Contributory Pension scheme as we speak. There is no person who has retired Delta State that is not on pension. For him to say we do not have a pension scheme is to say the least uncharitable”. He described the statement that majority of structure in Delsu universities were funded by TETFUND, saying that for him to say that, is laughable. ” When a man stays away for home for too long he will start asking about dead people. The National President of ASUU has not been home in Delta, so he does not know what is happening in Delta” He is using the quality he has in Umudike, where he lectures to qualify for the Universities in Delta State. “They assume what is happening to them is what is happening in Delta State” he asserted. He also mentioned that leadership of ASUU towed the part of error by saying that the three newly established universities in the state were unnecessary. ” For someone who has unpatriotically said this, it was worth noting that the first visitors we had in University of Delta, Agbor were members of ASUU National who came to initiate lecturers to the union and collect union dues from staffs in the University. “If they should not have existed that should not have come to start collecting dues from them. We have no apologies for that, if the need arises, we would establish more universities. He also described claims by ASUU leadership concerning the poor treatment of staffs working on the as laughable. “I am a staff of Delsu, he is in a Federal University in Umudike where a Professor at the bar earns N550,000 while a Professor at bar in Delsu earns N633, 000 a month. I do not know how else suffering can be defined, it is obvious that it is the man earning N550, 000 is suffering”. He noted that the lecturers in Delta State University have been earning Academic Allowance for the 15 years, saying that all these attack on the Delta State Universities is borne out of jealousy. “Try and use Delsu as a model while negotiating with the Federal Government for the Federal Universities. There is need to come and learn from us. Even the new universities in Delta are paying Professors higher than the University of Ibadan, Ahmadu Bello University amongst others” he declared. https://independent.ng/delta-blasts-ASUU-national-chair-over-false-claims-urges-union-to-use-universities-in-delta-as-benchmark-for-negotiation/
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Odidigboigbo:Ok |
I thought dogs don't go back to their vomit? |
I thought he was once a senator? Nigeria politicians no dey tire. |
Is he sitting at home in Finland? |
Is that night gown? |
MadamVanessa:Do you expect them to tell you that. More than two hours have gone since I made this post yet the information displayed keep stating that they will be back in 15 mins. |
For the past two hours, the lindaikeji's blog has not been going through. Could it be as a result technical issue or hacked by hackers?
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Me: AA, O+ Wife: AA, O+ |
bammo:Like I pointed earlier, it is possible in an ideal society. What you pointed out can only be possible for the informed mind. |
Kyiv, Ukraine – “Russia will come here. There will be plenty of money. Everything will be in order!” That’s what Valerii, a minibus driver, told me eight years ago in Donetsk, the administrative capital of the eponymous region in southeastern Ukraine. It was shortly before the May 11, 2014 “referendum” organised by pro-Russia separatists in Donetsk and the neighbouring, smaller region of Luhansk. Known collectively as “Donbas”, the regions broke away from the central government in Kyiv – and were recognised by Moscow only this year. Valerii, bearishly burly and tall, was genuinely kind-hearted and sweet. But he truly hated Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, who had left his seat and Ukraine weeks earlier after months-long protests in Kyiv. Yanukovich came to power in 2010 and brought a coterie of his cronies to Kyiv. His lesser minions wrestled control of hundreds of businesses in Donetsk – including two that belonged to Valerii. First, they took over his furniture store, and then he had to give away his poultry farm, where he fed chickens with corn to “make their skin look yellow and easy to sell”, he recalled with pride. He spent his last savings on a Mercedes minibus, and a television crew with me as a producer hired him to drive us around Donetsk in April 2014. We called him Val. Val’s hatred of Yanukovich, who went down in history as Ukraine’s most pro-Russian ruler, didn’t translate into anything negative towards Moscow or Russian President Vladimir Putin. Val wholeheartedly believed that Putin would annex Donbas the way he’d annexed Crimea just weeks earlier, and that the corruption and economic degradation that dawned on Donbas in the 1990s would be gone for good. Val remembered the good old days, when Donbas was hailed as a “Soviet workers’ paradise”, and its blue-collar residents, especially coal miners and steelworkers, enjoyed hefty salaries and plenty of perks. They had free healthcare, education and dirt-cheap vacations to Crimea or even the “socialist camp,” or Moscow-friendly nations of Eastern Europe – Bulgaria or Poland. Hundreds of thousands of people flocked to Donbas from all over the USSR – and mostly switched to Russian. The 1991 Soviet collapse was painful and disorienting to the USSR’s 287 million of its denizens, but it hit Donbas especially hard. Economic ties with now-independent Russia began to sever, most of the benefits were gone, and once-affluent miners and steelworkers woke up to a new reality – “predator capitalism” with galloping inflation, organised crime, corruption and a total makeover of state ideology. Ukraine began forging a new national identity – predictably based on the lionising of ethnic Ukrainian statesmen, artists and war heroes. Some of these heroes fought against Soviet Moscow during World War II – and occasionally collaborated with Nazi Germans. Many Soviet-educated Ukrainians, who grew up feeling proud of the USSR’s role in defeating Adolf Hitler, were indignant – especially in Donbas. Meanwhile, locals associated a painful transition to capitalism with democratic reforms – and longed for a strong-armed, patriarchal ruler who would restore law and order and bring back the Soviet-era perks. Many in the region – just like in Crimea – felt neglected, forgotten and offended. Most of the region’s assets were privatised and went to a handful of oligarchs, who preferred not to remember about free scholarships and trips to Crimea for their workers. Yanukovich’s ascension to the presidency was seen as revenge, a triumph, a way to stick it to those slickers in Kyiv. And his shameful flight was a major letdown. When the residents of Donetsk took to the polling stations on May 11 to vote for their region’s “independence” from Russia, most looked sincerely elated. Val was one of them. They walked down the tidy streets of Donetsk, past new office centres, green parks and a bronze statue of the Beatles next to a British flag. The city was proudly Anglophile – it had been founded in 1869 by a Welshman named John Hughes, who was invited there by Russian tsar Alexander III to open a steel plant and a coal mine. As for Luhansk, it was founded in 1795 by another Brit, Charles Gascogne, who started a foundry. Thousands also rallied throughout Donetsk, usually starting their marches under the giant statue of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin on the main square. They carried portraits of Lenin and his successor Josef Stalin, and chanted anti-Ukrainian slogans and obscenities – along with the Soviet anthem. Fighting erupted in and around Donetsk, and separatists aided by thousands of Russian “volunteers” began to force out demoralised and poorly armed Ukrainian servicemen. Shelling began, leaving gaping holes in apartment buildings and killing dozens. The separatists and Kyiv accused each other of deliberately targeting civilians. Separatists restored the Stalinist constitution that prescribed the death penalty for a number of crimes, and people started to disappear into “basements”, or makeshift prisons, where they were tortured and occasionally killed. Val’s mood started to change. He saw many of his idealist friends joining separatist squads – but fighting next to drunks and ex-cons, who started “expropriating” posh cars and looting the houses and apartments of pro-Ukrainian activists or businessmen. One night in May, several armed separatists ordered Val out of his minibus – and drove away in it. He got it back only thanks to his separatist friend. My team went back to Donetsk hours after the Malaysian MH17 passenger plane crashed with 298 people on board on July 17, 2014; investigators say a Russian-made missile fired from a part of eastern Ukraine held by the rebels. Much of the debris was found in the village of Hrabove, in the Donetsk region. Val drove us every day to the largest fragment of the fuselage that was laying in a field with ripening wheat. Each time, we drove by roadblocks filled with armed separatists. Once, they tried to “expropriate” our Kevlar bulletproof vests that looked elegant and light compared with their heavy, badly fitting flak jackets. One morning, the road we took bisected a burning wheat field that smelled like burning flesh. Val’s minibus whizzed by a woman in her 30s and her little daughter, three or four years old, who were pushing a stroller with a suitcase. They were walking towards us, we were running late for a live broadcast – and didn’t stop to give them a lift. I still feel guilty about leaving them there. Donetsk changed. Instead of throngs of people enjoying an ice cream or strolling to work, it turned into an empty shell of its former self, where rare, frightened passersby were seen walking and looking around with suspicion. Living standards plummeted, and many average residents had to rely on humanitarian aid from Ukraine or Russia. Makeshift coal mines provided jobs, but poor safety measures killed many. When I asked Val about his pro-Russian stance, he said that he’d already sent his wife and daughter to Kyiv – and would pack up and leave once he was done with us. “To hell with Putin!” he said and added a long expletive. Soon, the separatists banned Western journalists, but people fleeing the regime eagerly talked about their atrocities. One of them was Afanasy, the archbishop of Luhansk, who told me how they sentenced him to death for his pro-Ukrainian stance. They blindfolded the full-bearded cleric and put him up against a wall on a hot day in June 2014. He heard a shot – but the bullet didn’t hit him. They removed the blindfold and told him to leave town in his rundown Lada. But the separatists didn’t last long. They quickly turned Donbas into a dozen feuding fiefs, clashing over a factory or a coal mine. Several “generations” of separatist leaders died violent deaths or fled to Russia. One of the “longest-serving” leaders was Alexander Zakharchenko, a former poultry seller and police academy dropout nicknamed “Daddy”. He headed Donetsk for almost four years until an explosive hidden in the lamp of the Separ (Separatist) restaurant in central Donetsk killed him and his bodyguard, on August 31, 2018. He was succeeded by Denis Pushilin, a 40-year-old former employee of a confectionery company who ran a Ponzi scheme in Donetsk. On February 21, Pushilin signed an agreement on “friendship, cooperation and mutual assistance” with Russia after Moscow recognised Donetsk’s and Luhansk’s “independence”. Three days later, Russia invaded Ukraine. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/4/22/reporters-notebook-how-donbas-evolved-under-separatists
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boladale123:Actually, it's meant to be every five years. The last time such money was released was under President Goodluck like you stated. Another point is the issue of welfare. The last welfare package for university staff was 10 years ago. If FG can take care of the welfare and the 200billion for infrastructure, I strongly believe ASUU could suspend their strike while they (FG and ASUU) work out the payment platform - UTAS. |
If you are very hungry ( to the point of death), would you go for food or motivational talk? In ideal society what you said should be the ideal thing but Nigeria is not an ideal society the last I checked. |
With the high rate of poverty and unemployment everywhere that to me will be very difficult. |
akpunda86:Until you stop behaving like a houseboý and start acting like the owner of the house, the insult will continue. |
Gpexchange:Except I'm not doing the right thing or I'm not on the right page. Here is a domain I listed on Sedo. No sign of country of origin.
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Reno D chemical reactor. |
Gpexchange:I don't know. I've not given it try. |
symbuul:Click on the listed domain, it will take you to the first image I uploaded. Next click on the layout button, select the selling button. Under the selling button, you will find the second image I uploaded. You will find several options for your sales lander. You will find the one that doesn't bring up your country of origin. I hope this explanation helps. Goodluck.
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symbuul:For MLS premium, you can only select the buy now button. |
symbuul:I believe you can. Click on your domain link, search for layout. Under selling button you will find different types of layout for your sales landing page. Select the ones that does not display your country of origin. Here is mine.
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For clarification, that 200billion is strictly for infrastructure. As part of the agreement with FG, it was meant to be released every five years. Unfortunately, it was released once and that was under President Goodluck. |
For clarification, that 200billion is strictly for infrastructure. As part of the agreement with FG, it was meant to be released every five years. Unfortunately, it was released once and that was under President Goodluck. |
Propaganda. I don't trust any information coming from that link. |
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