EFGH's Posts
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Immediately they say the same person is a graduate of Mechanical and Chemical Engineers, I know the Daura Secret Service are simply telling us a hoax story. |
Have you guys create another page after the previous one was close bops of fighting and the use of insulting words. |
Our public office holders and lies are like conjoin twins sharing the same brain. |
Just this afternoon I was going through my facebook timeline, I came across this write up by a patriotic Nigerian who has some insight about the Man Gen. T. Y Burutai, he title his write-up as "SOMEBODY IS DEFINITELY LYING" Please feel free to read and make the final decision yourself. SOMEBODY IS DEFINITELY LYING You see, all that some of us ask for is that the General explain to us if the two properties in Dubai are in his Asset Declaration document. If they are, how he saved up to buy properties in Dubai, and possibly in Nigeria. This should be very easy, noting that each of the properties is said to be worth $420,000 (N63m for one or N126million for 2 houses at N150/$1). Were the properties financed by savings, loans from banks or some friends, instalment payments, inheritance, or even dash by a friend? It is not really difficult to buy any property in that city of you can afford. At least, having been to that country almost 8 times, I know that there is always someone trying to sell you apartments, flats, condos, houses, right from the airport to your hotel, markets and every turn you make, in different terms. I've a friend who always offer himself to be sold to. He will follow them those beautiful leggy chinanas for free rides to and from their offices to watch video shows and for free meal. But for some people, who said that there was no way, Diezani Alison-Madueke, who in 6 years was Minister in 3 Ministries (Transport, Mines and Steel, and Petroleum) who before then worked for Shell for about 20 years rising to the rank of Executive Director can not save to buy jewelry and property in Abuja but a General who is leaving on public service salary can is both funny and stupid. These same people came up with the excuse that there was no procurement department or directorate in the DHQ until 2015 and the General was never its Director. Well, I hate to break it to them that the man lied. If he said he was never the Director of Procurement at the DHQ, I'll say may be, even though all his online profile entries, including that on the website of the Nigerian Army ( http://www.army.mil.ng/lt-gen-ty- buratai/ ) show that that was the position he held between his stint as the Commandant of NASI and the Head of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF). But to say no procurement unit in the DHQ until he became the COAS and he set it up? Give me a break. I believe the man and his supporters lied when they said there was no procurement department until 2015. I trained some of the procurement officers of that department as far back as 2011. In fact, I facilitated on many other trainings, both locally and internationally after that. He can argue that he was never a director of procurement in that unit, but he will be lying if he said he establish the department in 2015. The 2007 Public Procurement Act, mandated that all government establishments must set up their procurement units. And unlike the undisciplined mainstream civil service, the military and the other paramilitary are disciplined and more professional. They were the first to comply with the directive. That was between July 4th, 2007 and 2009. How can supporters of this General tell us such departments never existed until 2015, when it is not just a suggestion or fancy position or a department, it is a legally/constitutionally required section? Is he saying that for 8 years since the directive, the military were engaging in illegalities? And then a picture of him emerged opening a seminar (allegedly) for that same department in 2014 as its Director. Tell me the picture is Photoshop, but that "no procurement department until 2015" excuse will not sell. Next excuse, please. https://mobile.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1098604100185281&id=100001071055720&set=a.583308278381535.1073741840.100001071055720&refid=7&_ft_=qid.6300482372630253632%3Amf_story_key.2598883660923904635&__tn__=E
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Buhari though governing Nigeria is as simple as drinking fura da nono and chewing gworo. |
BEFORE last year’s presidential election, no one
thought it necessary to ask president Muhammadu
Buhari, who was then candidate of the All
Progressives Congress (APC), how he hoped to work
the magic of achieving his promised exchange rate
parity between the naira and dollar. It was,
however, apparently sufficient for him and many
hopeful others that his unorthodox financial and
econometrics models soared on the wings of
nostalgia. He offered no real plan, nor explained
the economic dynamics by which that parity would
be procured, nor yet did he take into account the
eventful intervening years since parity last reigned.
All he said was that once the killer, corruption,
was destroyed and discipline established, nothing
was impossible, not even an exchange rate that
incongruously widened shortly after he was
overthrown as military head of state. Thus, after
assuming the presidency last year, he still felt and
spoke of the possibility of some sort of exchange
rate parity. But once he encountered the country’s dire economic problems and saw and also felt its magnitude, his voice began to weaken and his steps falter. From bemoaning his advanced age and the inevitable weakness it brought with it, to accusing the immediate past president in particular of completely wrecking the economy, the president slowly moved away from talk of parity to sustaining the status quo. Finally, after loathing any talk of devaluation consequent upon the fall in national revenue, and describing the naira as the proud symbol of the country’s patriotic and nationalistic outlook, which everyone must embrace, the president has consented to market forces determining the naira’s realistic exchange rate or value. President Buhari had finally met change, and change has worked its wonders on him. If anyone was astonished by that clear volte face, it was because they were yet to hear him speak candidly and honestly about the economy and the modern principles that undergird it. In his numerous interviews with the Nigerian media to mark his one year in office, the president responded to a question on the kind of economic advice he was receiving by declaring that most of the time, the economists spoke above his head when they explained why the economy was experiencing turbulence. He would submit to their advice, he said plaintively, because both the problem and the economists had overwhelmed him and he was wary of being seen as the obstacle to the country’s economic revival and transformation. Before the presidential election, President Buhari also mocked those who suggested that the price of fuel could not be lower than it was. He claimed to know what to do to bring the price of fuel down and relieve the common man of his anguish. One of his former ministers when he was head of state, Tam David-West, a professor, worked the arithmetic and announced gleefully that anyone who said the price of fuel could not be brought down was insincere. After he assumed office and made some appointments, including unwisely retaining the petroleum portfolio in his office, the president bounced confidently around that once his abracadabra was concluded, fuel price would come down. Not only did it not come down eventually, it contradistinctively rose so steeply that few ever thought any president or government, let alone one that flaunts its pro-people credential so garishly, could raise the price of fuel per litre from a punishing N86 to an unbearable N145. The price hike was one of the things economists called for, and were sure would work. Now the president is touting the change as salutary and inevitable. As recently as his last media chat and thereafter, the president had promised to make the Niger Delta a living hell for pipeline vandals and regional activists and militants interrupting the flow of crude oil sales. He would treat them the same way he was treating Boko Haram insurgents and achieving results, he fumed. A few weeks after the last of such threats against the militants, especially against the Niger Delta Avengers who had brought crude oil export down by more than 700,000 barrels per day, his government opened negotiations with the militants, and even appeared desperate to get every miscreant in the region involved. Opinions were divided in the Niger Delta on the propriety of negotiation, but a significant part of the country and the rest of the world thought the government could not win the creek battles it appeared eager to court and wage. And so to peace talk, which he had forsworn, went the president, a changed and considerably chastened man. The enduring paradox of the Buhari presidency is that he came into office as the chief agent of change; but he is fast becoming the one change is changing. President Buhari is still holding out in many ideational redoubts, but if that paradox is real, and if the observations of many analysts are not far-fetched, he will be unrecognisable by 2019. Only last week, he still spoke intransigently of the Biafra agitation that has lathered the Southeast. Its campaigners, he sneered, were not born when the civil war raged and so did not experience the privations many victims had to endure. Agitation is cheap, the president seems to conclude, when you campaign from the comfort of your rooms. It remains to be seen whether he will enter into discussions with pro-Biafra agitators or not if the agitators up the ante somewhat disconcertingly. In addition, during his campaigns, the president ridiculed Nigerian leaders for allowing the refineries to run down. Once elected, he would look into the matter of the refineries and wave his magic wand yet again. He had done it before, he said exuberantly, and could do it again. To prove he was serious, the president in interviews within and outside the country suggested he knew so much about the refineries and was a leading participant in building one or two of them. He gave the impression it was a cakewalk to build refineries. But after one such interview, and without directly referring to the president, an incensed ex-president Olusgeun Obasanjo roared that anyone who said he could rehabilitate the refineries was merely engaging in wishful thinking. On his own, the rather burdened Minister of State for Petroleum, Ibe Kachikwu, has vacillated on the topic in a manner that sees him torn between the president’s fantasy and the economic reality and nuisance of decrepit, money gobbling machinery. Finally, during his first anniversary media interviews, the president responded to a question on ex-president Goodluck Jonathan’s national conference and the imperative of restructuring. He barely concealed his disgust, not to say his fury. He had not looked at it, he said dismissively, promising it would end in the archives where it truly belonged. Like his other viewpoints on key national economic and political matters, the president is fairly anachronistic. While it is true Dr Jonathan used the national conference issue as a red herring, the structural problems the country faces have defied solution outside the framework of political reengineering. Dr Jonathan reluctantly, and perhaps mischievously, yielded to the convocation of a national conference. There is nothing to show that President Buhari would not reluctantly also yield to a national conference or its variants. Once he does, his change, begun with floating the naira, would become complete, making him the putative master of change transformed by policy summersaults into the servant of change. But what is truly worrisome about the president’s Damascene experience is not his seemingly easy surrender to change, the subsumption of his old and unworkable ideas under the modern and practical imperatives of new economics and new politics, but the subliminal spin off. The problem is that he appears to be ruling the country by yielding very reluctantly and unmethodically to ideas that war against his instincts and constricted experience rather than ruling by a careful and structured architecture of modern ideas designed for today and the day after tomorrow. The country would profit from robust and well-grounded ideas of how to govern a modern state. Instead, the president has instituted ad hocism on such a horrifying scale that he has no impression he should be laying the foundation for Nigeria’s future and democracy, a responsibility his predecessors also woefully, if not criminally, shirked. http://thenationonlineng.net/buhari-getting-change-didnt-bargain/
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All the girls are beautiful, but if I am to chose, I will go for the Bekwarra sheila. |
Mayor21:From Bekwarra and you? |
jiksman3:Yes, I use my phone to do the online registration. Try this link http://nbcltdcareers.com/login.php |
jiksman3:use this link http://nbcltdcareers.com |
following |
Nafizzey:I am @ the venue where Mathematics scrip markers will be brief. What of u? |
I have gatecrash @ Rumfa college Kano State. But the waec officials are still arranging the waec script. May God help all fellow gatecrashers. |
modelmike7:Zombie spotted! |
More pics.
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It's no more news that even before the last general election, President Buhari was face with an allegation that he don't have waec result. One will think that after the election, such news will naturally be sweep under the carpet the Nigeria way just like the result faulcification against "The highest landlord in Africa" die a natural death. however, with a resent court ruling that seem not to favour the President camp in the case file against him compelling him to produce his WAEC result, the President have hire some 15 SANs including Femi Falana and some high ranking lawyers to help defend him in court. What most Nigerians don't seem to understand is that, if Buhari have his waec result, why not present it instead of wasting text payers money to hire SANs to defend him. https://mobile.twitter.com/hashtag/PMBShowUsUrCertificate?src=hash
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pls I want to gatecrash in Kano tomorrow, but I have not collect my original waec result, will they accept the computer print out? secondly, since Kano have two centers ie Rumfa college and Tarauni secondary school, does any body have any idea where the will mark Maths, Physic or Chemistry? cos those are the subjects I will be interested in marking. Thanks. |
Dear OP, You see, inasmuch as writing/contracting your Cv out to be written by a professional Cv writer is good, "the truth be say", about 98.999999999...% of good jobs in Nigeria today are gotten not because your Cv was written by the owner of jobber man blog or any other professional Cv writer, but most people either get their jobs bcoz of "man know man" or bcoz they "bread" someone with some million =N= "bread". Only few persons manage to get their jobs through the correct way. That's not to say miracles don't happen, Infact I am a strong believer of Miracle and I know that Miracle will soon shine on my way and all the jobless Nairalanders IJN. Can I hear a thunderouse Amen if y'all believe me . |
Seeeeeeee:And you are here trying to drag 23K job with HND graduate. if your so call "BSC" was that useful and superior to the HND, you should not bring your self so low to be dragging this 23k job with them. I am a HND holder and I bet you, when it's comes to anything academic text, I will beat you anytime any day anywhere. |
I have send you a mail sir. |
989900:Really so tell me where Femi sound bias? waiting for ur own unbiased analyses of Bubu lead government of kwaruption. |
vykta:so where are thou going now? [ |
Mayor21:I am also a Cross Riverian and I support BIAFRA! |
@ OP pls what will I fill in the colum provided for Job ID? |
Eshiet64:K, will be waiting to hear from you. |
I have send you a mail. |
dickson2000:Tnx bro I really do appreciate. |
Manchelsea:pls I don't understand what you mean by "Flat foot" can u explain more to me? Tnx. |
job description and what are the product to be distributed? |
Job description and what are the product to be distributed? |
ok |
Even the aboki's are complaining bitterly about his buhaconomic policies. |
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so tell me where Femi sound bias? waiting for ur own unbiased analyses of Bubu lead government of kwaruption.