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PhonesRe: Gionee M3mini Discussion Thread [HOT] by Emmysteve(m): 4:50pm On Dec 19, 2015
Please who can assist me, all the psiphon I downloaded ain't working. They would display connecting continously. Please help me out with the link to download the correct app. I am tired.
PhonesRe: Gionee M3mini Discussion Thread [HOT] by Emmysteve(m): 4:04pm On Dec 19, 2015
IKON360:
For Psiphon handler settings on mtn, to subscribe text D to 5900, nd 2 unsubscribe, text Cancel7d to 5900 repeat as desired nd kip on enjoying free 150mb continually
can you please help me with the link to download this?
PhonesRe: Gionee M3mini Discussion Thread [HOT] by Emmysteve(m): 8:17am On Dec 18, 2015
Neduzze5:
Post your numbers to be added to the Gionee M3mini whatsapp group
You want to derail the thread with unnecessary contacts. Nonsense, what is so important that it can't be discussed here. Mod pls hide every damnnn numbers
EducationRe: Clay Math Institute Denies Century Old Math Problem Solved By Nigerian by Emmysteve(m): 9:50pm On Nov 16, 2015
where the maths let me solve it. Olodos
PoliticsRe: Fuel Queues Worsen Across The Country - PUNCH by Emmysteve(m): 4:54pm On Nov 14, 2015
Enjoy the change you voted for.
PhonesRe: Android, Anyone? Part II by Emmysteve(m): 8:29pm On Nov 10, 2015
please who know how to roo tecno c7? abeg help
PoliticsRe: Tribunal Sacks Darius Ishaku, Declares Aisha Jumai Alhassan‎ Winner by Emmysteve(m): 2:00pm On Nov 07, 2015
The decision was made right from the presidential Palace. No justice. I just pity APC let government.
PoliticsRe: Tribunal Sacks Darius Ishaku, Declares Aisha Jumai Alhassan‎ Winner by Emmysteve(m): 1:58pm On Nov 07, 2015
I feel sorry for Nigerian judicial system. First Rivers and now Taraba. what a shame
TravelRe: 4 Members Of A Family Die In Fatal Accident In Benue - Graphic Photos by Emmysteve(m): 5:46pm On Nov 06, 2015
And some people get mind to snap. rip
CrimeHow Landlady, Children, Nearly Beat Tenant To Death In Lagos by Emmysteve(op): 1:17pm On Nov 04, 2015
A 51-year-old trader and mother of three,
Sarah Bakare, who lives on Oluwole Street in
the Ejigbo area of Lagos State, narrowly
escaped being hacked to death recently, by
the landlady and her seven children.
Narrating the incident, the victim told Crime
Alert after she was discharged from hospital
that she was lucky to be alive to relive her
ordeal.
How trouble started
She recalled
that trouble
started after
she rented a
room and
parlour self-
contained
apartment
last year
January for
which she
paid
N250,000.
According to
her, “A few
months after
I moved into
the house, I
began to
experience different attacks from the landlady,
Madam Lydia Opetola, and her children.
It all started in the month of March last year
when I noticed that one of the landlady’s sons
was fond of peeping through the door each
time I was in the bathroom. At first, I ignored
it but when it continued, I brought the issue
to the notice of his mother. Instead of calling
her son to order, she accused me of not
allowing her children to live in peace in their
father’s house.
So, I went to the agent to complain because
before I rented the apartment, I made
enquiries through the agent and he assured
me that the house was okay, not knowing he
was only interested in the commission. “From
peeping scenario, the landlady’s children
began to turn off the source of water which
also happened each time I was in the
bathroom as midway, the water would stop
flowing and I would have to come out of the
bathroom with soap all over my body.
“At that time, I didn’t have a water reservoir.
When it continued, I met the landlady and
complained to her again. Then one day, five of
her children challenged for daring to ask their
mother why they often turn off the tap from
the control source. Again, I reported this
incident to the agent who pleaded on their
behalf. Later, I was able to acquire a water
reservoir to avoid trouble, and I was also
forced to pay N10,000 as collateral for
damages.”
Rent renewal
“After my rent expired, I paid N130,000 to my
landlady on February 2, 2015 and for about a
month, they didn’t trouble me or my children
but in April, they renewed the attacks.
Sometimes, I would buy water outside to allow
peace reign. I then only fetched water when
they were not in the house. I practically lived
in fear. If I had known, I would have looked
for another place when my rent expired.”
My ordeal
“One Sunday, I returned from church and
discovered that that they had inserted sticks
in the pipes outside and blocked flow of water
to my bathroom and kitchen. At this point, I
invited some landlords in the area to come
and see what was happening and that the
attacks and humiliation had become
unbearable for me. Seven of the landlady’s
children attacked me for calling the landlords
and allowing them into the compound.
My landlady walked out on them, saying she
had nothing to discuss with them. The
landlords then advised that if they didn’t
want me to live in the house any longer, they
should refund the rent I paid so that I could
move out instead of not allowing me to have
peace. Their response was that they did not
have the money to refund and that I should
continue till November when my rent would
expire.
In the month of August when my landlady
requested for money for electricity bill, I told
her to use part of my outstanding N15,000
balance with her. “About two weeks ago, they
disconnected electricity supply to my
apartment. When there is power supply I
won’t have electricity. I kept mute as I could
not query them for fear of being attacked. On
Thursday, October 14, I didn’t have water.
So, I went to fetch water from the tap outside
my apartment. Immediately I opened the tap,
one of the landlady’s sons, Folorunsho, hit
me with a plank and I fell down. Before I
realised what happened to me, all the seven
descended on me, hitting me with different
objects. I started shouting for help but as I
was shouting, they put on their generator so
that people would not hear my voice.
While this was going on, the landlady kept
threatening that they would kill and bury me
inside the compound and nobody would know.
They also attacked my daughter who ran to
my aid when she heard my cries. One of them
broke a bottle which they used to stab me on
the face.
“All attempts by neighbours to rescue me
failed as they attacked anyone who entered
the compound. Maybe, I would have died if
the neighbours had not called OPC members
who rescued me and my daughter.
Immediately the OPC came into the
compound, some of the children escaped.”
Eyewitness accounts
A neighbour, Olanrewaju Afolayan, who owns
a shop in the neighbourhood, came to
Sarah’s rescue. According to the neighbour,
“On that day, I heard noise and I ran to where
it was coming from. I tried to go into the
compound but a male voice warned that I
should not intervene. I defied the threat and
found my way in to help Madam Sarah. I was
given a slap and beaten with a plank, too.”
Another eyewitness who gave her name as
Mrs Kashimu also alleged that Mrs Opetola
and her children were brutal. She said, “It was
my son who called my attention to what was
happening. But I did not take it serious until
he told me that our neighbour who went in to
help was beaten up. Thank God for some
neighbours who alerted the OPC men. I feel it
was a planned work, an attempt to kill Sarah.
They even went to put on the generator so
that the sound could cover up her cries for
help. I want them to pay for what they have
done because this is not the first time they
would do that. Every other tenant that has
lived with them has never known peace. They
really surprise us with their attitude. I want
justice for Sarah so that it will not repeat
itself with another person. They are a real
terror in our community.”
Landlady disappears with family
When Crime Alert visited the scene of the
incident at No 21, Oluwole Street, Ejigbo,
neither the landlady nor her children were
available for comment. It was said that the
entire family had disappeared after they were
released on bail and told to report to the
police station on Monday, last week.
Sarah said she suspects foul play in the way
the Police in Ejigbo Division is handling the
matter. “The police told me that the lawyer
who came for the release of my landlady and
her children dropped a fake address and that
when he was contacted by the IPO whose
name was given as Sergeant Joy, he told
them his clients were not disposed to appear
at the station.
“When my landlady and her children were
released last Friday and got back to the
compound on Saturday, I was in my room
when I heard the children asking if I was still
here, and that they would kill me. I called the
IPO and informed her. The police came to the
house this Monday, my landlady and her
children did not show up at the police
station.
“I have spent over N30,000 so far on
treatment at the Isolo General Hospital. I am
calling on the Lagos State Commissioner of
Police to please intervene in this matter. The
police at Ejigbo are not handling the case as
they should. The Opetolas should be fished
out from their hiding place.”
When Crime Alert contacted DSP Joseph
Offor, the Lagos State Police Public Relations
Officer, for his comment, he did not respond
to calls and text messages sent to him.

www.vanguardngr.com/2015/11/how-landlady-children-nearly-beat-tenant-to-death-in-lagos/
RomanceRe: Owerri Man Kills Girlfriend For Rejecting His Marriage Proposal by Emmysteve(op): 12:36pm On Nov 04, 2015
In this 21st century some people still pay their girlfriends school fees... Smh.
RomanceOwerri Man Kills Girlfriend For Rejecting His Marriage Proposal by Emmysteve(op): 12:32pm On Nov 04, 2015
POLICE in Imo State have begun investigating
the death of Onyinyechi Okegbulam from Egbu
in Owerri North Local Government Area who
was killed by her boyfriend for refusing his
marriage proposal.
In a gruesome murder, the 22-year-old
Onyinyechi was, until her untimely death, a
final year student of Federal Polytechnic,
Nekede in Owerri West Local Government Area
of the state. She was apparently shot in the
head at close range by her supposed boyfriend
in the village after she rejected his offer of
marriage.
Eyewitnesses said that the deceased was lured
out of her family home by the boyfriend at
night after she rejected him and was then
shot. Another source claimed that soon after
shooting the girl, the young man tried to
smuggle Onyinyechi’s lifeless body into his
car but scampered for safety when a woman
raised alarm, which attracted several people to
the scene.
It is believed that the ditched boyfriend was
responsible for the entire educational
expenses of the girl and it was this that
infuriated him. Police are now said to be
looking for the boyfriend, although it has not
yet been confirmed if an arrest has been
made.
One local resident said: “We heard that the
boy picked the bills for the girl’s education
but that the girl later abandoned the boy and
opted to marry another man. We have even
heard that the marriage has been fixed before
the boyfriend struck.”
A spokesman from the Imo State Police
Command said they are investigating the
matter and the late girl’s parents are
cooperating with them. If the boyfriend is
caught, it is almost certain that he will be
charged with murder.

www.nigerianwatch.com/news/8118-owerri-man-shoots-girlfriend-for-rejecting-his-marriage-proposal-after-he-pays-her-school-fees
PoliticsRe: Nigerian Economy Records ‘Worst Week’ Since 2008 - The Cable by Emmysteve(m): 4:17pm On Oct 31, 2015
fulaniHERDSman:
Wailer's opinion cool
Grow up foooooolish cattle rearer
PoliticsRe: Nigerian Economy Records ‘Worst Week’ Since 2008 - The Cable by Emmysteve(m): 4:09pm On Oct 31, 2015
Who will tell mr president to stop running down our economy?
PhonesRe: GIONEE M3mini(4000mah Battery) Full Specification And Price by Emmysteve(m): 5:41pm On Oct 30, 2015
olahero:
I wanna sell M3 Mini a week old, need cash for something, interested buyer should whatsapp me on 07062183593.
For how much Pls?
PhonesRe: How To Recover Lost Contacts From Phone by Emmysteve(op): 4:30pm On Oct 27, 2015
make una help me na.
PhonesRe: How To Recover Lost Contacts From Phone by Emmysteve(op): 6:35am On Oct 27, 2015
what's your problem spammer. Don't let me unleash my anger on you.
PhonesHow To Recover Lost Contacts From Phone by Emmysteve(op): 3:54am On Oct 27, 2015
Hello. please i need help. I just discovered that virus has eaten up my phone contact address book that came with the phone and all my contacts are gone. I searched play store whether i can reinstall the app but it wasn't there. please how can i recover them. please help
PhonesRe: Itel Inote IT1701 Prime Discussion Thread by Emmysteve(m): 3:40am On Oct 27, 2015
temizeee:
successfully tweaked mine earlier this week......enjoying prime.
Pls do u know how to tweak Itel It1503. want to buy the phone but the only thing stopping me is that Imei. thanks
PhonesRe: Itel Inote IT1701 Prime Discussion Thread by Emmysteve(m): 3:33am On Oct 27, 2015
otabuko:
I've downloaded both.... Please put me through..... On how to change the imei number.... Thanks...
I too wanna know. please
SportsRe: Welcome Party By Nigerians After CHAN Qualification by Emmysteve(op): 9:00am On Oct 26, 2015
nairalandmaster:
nice one op. keep it up
Thank you so much
SportsWelcome Party By Nigerians After CHAN Qualification by Emmysteve(op): 3:35am On Oct 26, 2015
CareerMass Sack, Demotion Looms In Customs by Emmysteve(op): 6:58am On Oct 19, 2015
THERE were indications, weekend, that the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, will experience mass sack and demotion of officers and men of the service as its comptroller general, Col. Hameed Ali (retd) has vowed to demote all officers promoted unevenly in the service.


Ali has also promised to carry out an in house cleansing exercise that may lead to the sack of officers and men of the service found to be corrupt.

Speaking to newsmen at the Customs Training School in Ikeja, Lagos, the Customs boss said he had been informed about irregular promotion, posting and recruitment in the service over the years. His words, “In every conversation and meeting with my men, I have told them that I realized that there are so many anomalies as regard to their posting, promotion and recruitment.

“We will set up a committee to review the whole thing. Where people have not been promoted out of no fault of theirs we will address it and where people have been promoted based on godfatherism we will review it.”

The CG also warned officers who had refused to go on training because they were sitting on lucrative desks stressing that such an era in the service has gone. He noted, “Where people have refused to go to courses because they think they are sitting on a desk where they make some ‘egunje’ we know what to do. There are so many internal things that I don’t need to come out and start reeling them because we have taken note of all this and I and my senior management have resolved to look at this and we will ensure that there is equity and justice in the service.”

Meanwhile, the CGC had vowed to embark on house cleansing in order to rid the service of corrupt officers and men. According to him, no organization in Nigeria is corruption free but the few bad eggs in the service had tainted the rest as corrupt. “Most customs men and officers are not corrupt but what happened is that because our activities relate to the member of the public, and if there is one bad egg the news goes around so far and the impression today in Nigeria is that we are all corrupt because of the activities of some few bad eggs and I have said that we must do some house cleansing and get rid of those bad eggs in other to strengthen the customs.

“There is no organisiation in the country that will beat its chest and say no corrupt element in it so. I cannot also say there are no corrupt elements in customs and I want to say this and say it with all sense of responsibility that in customs, there are few corrupt elements.”

The former military administrator of Kaduna state had also informed that the federal government had stopped granting of import waivers.
Ali said President Buhari had cancelled all existing waivers and put an end to the granting of new ones.

“Waivers are beyond us but the good thing is that the current president has put a stop to it.

“There is no going to be waivers except those one that the law allowed for and that is the diplomatic and not that they are written UN.

“We will subject them to scrutiny and know that they are genuinely diplomatic cargo

“There are consignment for diplomat that are evacuating their thing to their way back home after serving outside and those waivers are statutory and we will continue to have it but things like someone bringing machine or rice then exploit his relationship with government and get those approved are over.

“He has said no waivers and when anyone comes with a paper, I should ask who gave him so there is no waiver and we will maximize that because we want money and we can raise the revenue profile.”
www.vanguardngr.com/2015/10/mass-sack-demotion-looms-in-customs
PhonesRe: D New Amazing Itel Inote Prime Tablet by Emmysteve(m): 8:55am On Oct 18, 2015
Please who else is using Glo Bis on Itel it 1503? Pls is possible? KINDLY HELP PLS
PhonesRe: Phone Engineers On Nairaland Willing To Assist You - Part II by Emmysteve(m):
Deleted
PhonesRe: Android, Anyone? Part II by Emmysteve(m):
Deleted
PhonesRe: D New Amazing Itel Inote Prime Tablet by Emmysteve(m):
.
SportsRe: CHAN Qualifier: Nigeria Vs Burkina Faso (2 - 0) On 17th October 2015 by Emmysteve(m): 12:18pm On Oct 16, 2015
Kh
CareerWhy Private Schools Pay Peanuts by Emmysteve(op): 3:08am On Oct 15, 2015
The minimum wage may be N19,000, but teachers, especially those working in low-cost private schools earn far less. The result: high staff turnover. KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE reports on how teachers struggle to make ends meet, while proprietors fight to keep them.

Last session, Ebunoluwa Marvins (not real name), a widow and mother of three, taught at a private school in Agege, Lagos State, where she was paid N15,000 monthly – about N4,000 shy of the Federal Government’s minimum wage. It was not easy to make ends meet with that amount of money. She participated in the extra lessons organised by the school to earn extra income. However, the little she earned did not make much difference. Before her husband’s death, less than two years ago, the extra income was used to pay tuition fees of her two older sons (they enjoyed 50 per cent scholarship). After his death, though they were placed on full scholarship, the money was grossly inadequate.

Mrs Marvins thought relocating to an accommodation closer to the school would help; she sought help from a friend on the matter. The friend was shocked to learn that she earns a measly N15,000 compared to her own salary of N100,000, which she thought was insufficient.

She advised the teacher to change schools instead, which she was able to do before the start of the 2015/2016 academic session. Her new school now pays her close to N100,000 for salary and extra lessons.

“I am so happy. I was afraid to change school because of the scholarship my children enjoy. But the money was not keeping us. We had to depend on the goodwill of people to give us food and money,” she said.



Mrs Marvins is one of thousands of teachers working in low-cost private schools and earning far less than the minimum wage.

Developing Effective Private Education in Nigeria (DEEPEN), an initiative of the Department for International Development (DFID), classifies low-cost private schools as schools that charge between N1,000 to N25,000 per session. Many teachers in such schools, especially those in rural or slum areas of Lagos State, do not earn up to N15,000. Investigations revealed that salaries in the schools range from N7,000 to N30,000 in extreme cases for head teachers and principals.

Ms Melody Isaac teaches in Cas Marybon School, which is around Agbado-Ijaiye, a suburb of Lagos. Though she declined to say exactly what she earns, she told The Nation it is less than N15,000.

“Teachers get paid between N10,000 and N20,000. I don’t earn up to N15,000,” she said.

Raheem Ayomide, who teaches at Praise Way College at Oke Odo, Lagos, has negotiated a new salary with his boss, so he may earn up to N18,000 if the proprietor keeps to his promise.

“In my school, I don’t think any teacher is paid up to N20,000. I took a break from the school to complete my education at the university, some months ago. But when I was working my boss was paying me N15,000 and you know in a private secondary school you take more than two classes and subjects. When I came back there were space for me. I was expecting more than N15,000. But we discussed and he told me that the highest paid teachers get N20,000 so he said he would increase my pay but not up to N20,000. He said he would pay me N18,000 and I will take three subjects. The grace I have is that the school is not far from my house. It is just on the next street so, no extra transport fares for me; just a five-minute walk,” said Ayomide.

According to a research by DEEPEN, the poor salaries paid by low-cost private schools make teachers seek greener pasture elsewhere, resulting in high teacher turnover in the schools. Many proprietors confirmed this problem, saying they are forced to run around looking for teachers at the beginning of each term.

However, they attributed the poor salaries they pay to the nature of the schools they run, which cater for the educational needs of low income families seeking better quality education than public schools offer.

Mrs Esther Dada, president, Association for Formidable Education Development (AFED), said high teacher attrition is a cross low-cost private schools owners have to bear because of the low salaries they pay.

“We have exodus of teachers from time to time, and mostly we low-cost schools because of the salary we are paying. When we train our teachers, because when they come in newly, they don’t know anything; they are raw. Hence, we give them in-service training and we train them from time to time to fulfill our purpose. But the moment they begin to get the drift of teaching and learning, they look for greener pastures,” she said.

Mrs Sola Ogunfowora, proprietor of Prescal Montessori School, Matogun, could not attract a new head teacher to her school because of poor pay.

“I had promised to pay N12,000 and she told me she would come. But I did not see her. Challenge of teachers leaving is too much. They want to collect money without working. Once you employ them within two to three months, they are getting ready to leave and if you ask why they say the money is not enough even if the amount was decided before employment,” she said in frustration.

Her experience is not really different from that of Deacon Abiodun Owolana, who runs Funbi Secondary School, Ajangbadi. He accused teachers of not being patient to reap the fruit of long service award.

He said: “As we are talking now, we are short of teachers. Some of the teachers likely don’t understand what they are doing. If you are in a school a year, two years, there are some benefits you should have if you are a long time staff in my school. In my school, I told them if you are up to three years and you want to go in good condition, you are entitled to N50,000 when you are going. But if I am paying you N10,000 and a neighbouring school offers N12,000, you forget about all those things and jump out because of N12,000.”

Mrs Dada, who runs Peacock School, in Ikorodu and Amuwo Odofin, however, noted that low- cost proprietors pay poorly because they charge low fees.

“In AFED schools, the minimum school fees is N5,000 – except for Epe – where they charge N3,000. Even at that, they are even begging them to come to school,” she said.

In line with those charges, Mrs Dada said she pays between N8,000 and N30,000 to her teachers.

“Some of the teachers, depending on the environment, earn N8,000; some earn N10,000. In my school in Amuwo, I have a graduate who is the head teacher and I was giving her N25,000. Now, she is asking for N30,000 and the number of children has dropped. The same thing with Ikorodu. I have a graduate there who majored in English. She is asking for N25,000. We were paying her N20,000 before,” she said.

Mrs Ogunfowora said she charges between N5,000 (for nursery) and N7,500 (for upper primary) as fees; while she pays teachers between N7,000 and N12,000. At Deacon Owolana’s school, the minimum tuition fee is N4,000 for nursery; while his secondary school charges N15,000. He said he pays teachers between N15,000 and N25,000. Their responses mirror teachers’ salaries among most low-cost private schools.

Regularity of the meagre salary is another issue in these schools. Ayomide said it is not unusual to experience delay in payment. He added that some schools even owe teachers.

“A lot of schools, 80 percent of schools, don’t normally pay on time. They owe teachers two to three months salary and they start giving different excuses,” he said.

Melody also said non-payment of the meagre salaries contributes to why teachers leave schools.

Explaining why some proprietors may delay salaries, Mrs Temitope Osibosi, National Treasurer, AFED, and proprietor of Santoi Nursery and Primary School, Ogudu, said many parents do not pay fees on time.

Her claim was confirmed by other proprietors who put the percentage of parents that pay school fees in full at between 45 and 50 per cent.

“About 50 per cent of my parents pay in full. Some carry over; even I have first-term carry over from last session in my school. Those children are still in my school. Their father lost his job but I cannot send them away – hoping that the man will get a job,” she said.

Deacon Owolana said with only 45 per cent fee compliance, paying salaries on time is sometimes difficult, though he tries to avoid delays.

“At times, we pay through our nose. It has not been easy. There was a term, after I paid salaries I was left with N50.00 as the school owner. There are a lot of challenges we face.

“I pay salaries in full. If the money is not enough to pay all the staff at a time, maybe I will the pay the primary section first, then the secondary section,” he said.

To augment their poor salaries, many teachers organise extra lessons for pupils and bill parents for it. Ayomide said lesson fees provide teachers in low-cost private schools a critical amount which boosts their incomes.

He said: “In my school we have extra lesson from 4-6pm. Parents who really want their children to participate will pay so the school does not really interfere. Although we have school lesson from 2 -4pm, which are paid with the school fees, we do our own from 4 to 6pm. If I am to take a student for two hours they will pay N2,000 at the least. For the lesson outside, I pick Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays which is three days in a week. If at all they pay it will be N5,000 per month. One thing I know is that the parent will see the impact of my teaching on the children. Adding all the money it probably gets to N30,000 or N40,000 which really increases our income before the main salary comes in.”

Mrs Marvins agreed with him. “Before my husband’s death, I used to take a young girl for extra lesson and earned N15,000 monthly. It really used to help me,” she said.

Melody said she augments her N15,000 salary in this way.

“If you have about 20 students in a class, we urge the parents to allow them do extra lesson. They pay N700 per month and the proprietress gets nothing from it. It is between the teacher and the students,” she said.

Despite paying low salaries, some low-cost private schools are able to retain teachers better than others. The Nation gathered that proprietors that gave teachers free hand to earn extra income through extra lessons were more likely to retain their teachers.

Mrs Dada, who said her head teacher has stayed for about 15 years, said she allows teachers to use the school for extra lessons.

“Most of the time, we allow them to go for lesson money. Like I did in my place, evening lessons 4-6pm, I give them free hand to operate. They use the school. I don’t bother about that one. I want them to take care of themselves. That would augment whatever I pay them,” she said.

Mr Bawo Ayeseteminikan, Ken Ade Private School, Makoko, Yaba, said he last employed a teacher three years ago because of his favourable policies.

“My school has been in existence for 25 years and I am proud to say I do not owe any of my teachers and they have no reason to look elsewhere for work. Rather, we have more teachers looking for work but I told them no. The last teacher I employed was three years ago and I have teachers who have been with me for the past 17 years. The teachers offer lesson and I don’t collect money from them and it enhances their decision not to leave my school because I discovered those earning “N15,000 or N25,000 and adds it to their salary. And where we have more than 25 students doing lesson, they pay at least N1,000 per week. Teachers leave other schools because most of the proprietors don’t have a way of paying them on time to retain them,” he said.
http://thenationonlineng.net/why-private-schools-pay-peanuts/

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