Engineerboat's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Engineerboat's Profile › Engineerboat's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 (of 272 pages)
Johnnyessence:AKETI 2012 after that who got the RED CARD eventually
|
Johnnyessence:This is Aketi 2012 after that what happen Distant 3rd
|
maxti:You can also get hooked up through. its live now https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENsJCM7sLxk |
perfectwazobia1:You are very correct. The guy making that ascertion should give us evidence or He should keep his mouth shot |
APCmyheart:AD constitution is different from PDP constitution |
APCmyheart:you've not answer my question, When did Jimoh Ibrahim come back to PDP |
Don’t you think the contest would be between the major political parties- The PDP and the APC and probably with the emergence of a third force? The political parties in the state have problem. Accord party (AP) is not very popular, PDP is dead, and the APC has crisis of who will be the candidate of the party; so obviously you cannot say this is the party that would win election in the state. I also support the idea of meeting the aspirants because election should not be do or die affairs. How do we solve the problems of Ondo State should be our concern. Even if am not running, am likely going to support, who will solve the problem of the state not who could win or who is popular. Such person can run under Accord, APC but really not PDP. If we cannot be governor, we are too strong to make sure that PDP doesn’t produce a successor. I can’t imagine a PDP candidate would come to this area and say he wants to win election here. Every Ondo South Senatorial district is entitled to the governorship of Ondo State morally as at today. Who has the greatest moral consideration for governorship race should be southern senatorial district because they only produced once and didn’t spent second term; in the north there had been two that had been produced there; in the central one has been produced there and is just finishing his second term. Let us leave Governor Mimiko out of this and not unnecessarily drag him on, let us sit down and formulate and find out who can solve the problem of Ondo State and how can the problem be solved, so if we know how the problem can be solved then who will solve the problem would not be an issue. Even, Governor Mimiko couldn’t solve the problem of Ondo state despite his educational background and profile. It is about how do we get resources to solve the state’s problem. Is Ondo state a state that politician, technocratic or entrepreneur can solve its problem, or is peculiar problem. People are attaching your name to Accord Party (AP) with the belief that you would run under the platform of the party, is it true? We are planning massively to leave the PDP and move down to Accord party, which is no longer, a secret and we are even planning to have meeting with the National leaders of the party very soon. I will also officially write the PDP to inform them about my final exit. If we solve some of those problem I have mentioned then anybody can use the platform to contest and we shall accommodate anybody to come down and run under Accord Party, so it might probably not be about me. If I see a candidate that can solve the problem, then I will support the candidate and I will have my rest. Few months to the November 26 governorship election and you want to start building a fresh structure in the Accord Party, Do you think this can work out? That is not a problem; PDP was dead when I came in, try and check the history. When I came to PDP those who could still remember would tell you that the party was completely dead and I brought it up in two months. What we did was to put N10 million to hold rally in 10 different locations and bought vehicles and get them donated across the state that was how we even invited Late Olusegun Agagu and brought former President Olusegun Obasanjo to Ondo State. The whole of Akure was shut down and we brought helicopters with about eight governors who attended the event to receive me officially to the party. The strategy of mobilization is not an issue, am a change mobilizer and drive people as quickly as I want to. I don’t need more than two months to drive people. You should know am not knew in politics because I started during papa Adekunle Ajasin’s time. Campaign itself should not be more than 60 days because you have to change the mindset of the people as they say today that it can be PDP. If they said it must be APC, then they must be able to move forward to solve this problem. If they don’t have an answer then it could be any party. You are a political heavy weight, and now that you’re leaving the platform of the Accord Party open for anyone since you’re not particularly adamant in running for the governorship race, is there any names you have penned down for the slot? In politics, you cannot zero anything because anybody can come. And if he can solve these problems, fine and if he cannot I will tell him he is not better than me. The normal thing that is developing the world today is about teamwork not about individual work and what is killing Mimiko’s government is lack of teamwork. How many times have you ever seen economic summit taking place in Ondo State; without a summit where people brainstorm and bring out idea, how do you develop. Look at late Agagu in those days, its about seminar and conference. The government is building mega schools and it is difficult to build them in all the 18 local government areas of the state. About three Local Government doesn’t have it, even in Okitipupa doesn’t have these Mega schools. Is this a decomposed policy of the government that really has a grassroots support. Also, getting a university all over the places doesn’t solve the problem, even the university in Akungba is not doing anything. You can’t say you have a University of Medicine in Ondo and the one of technology is at Okitipupa how do you fund them out of scarce resources. I think there is no policy interface in the programme of Governor Olusegun mimiko. The reason is that the governor is a fantastic politician but with zero base economic knowledge. He has nothing to offer economically. There is lot of mixed-reaction in the programmes of the federal government led by President Mohammadu Buhari, as stakeholder in the Nigeria project, what is your reaction about this? President Muhammadu Buhari came to face a lot of problems which he doesn’t have an answer. The change that APC brought was not conceptualized what they need is transformational change. They need to create a sense of urgency and establishment of practice must happen through institutionalization. Buhari didn’t know that federal civil servants in Nigeria were collecting N280 billion naira as salaries in a month so the budget of N4.6 trillion which is federal government’s budget, so the 60 percent of the budget is for salaries, 30 percent is for debt servicing while the remaining 10 percent is for capital project which is projected on 38 dollar per barrel provided you supply 2.5 million barrel par day but now you are supplying 800 barrel a day. When President Jonathan was there, accruable to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for proceed of petrol was 3. 6 billion dollar a month but when Buhari came in it turned to 600 million dollar a month he lost 3 billion dollar a month and its about 80 percent in the economic of the state. I have told Buhari in my article that low resources and capability will be the problems that his government would face. In selecting Ministers, he has to look for those who has the resource in solving the problem. Then, you will now have to get capable people who would have to help you drive the resources. The performance of his ministers is below expectation although they are not getting much allocation for their ministry. The fund is not there. Read more at: http://dailytimes.ng/interview-pdp-dead-in-ondo-state-jimoh-ibrahim/ The question now is, when did u come back to PDP
|
APCmyheart:Nobody said he should not contest. What happen to his accord party candidacy.
|
senatordave1:Responding, Oba Aladetoyinbo Aladelusi, who appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene the crises arising from substitution of Eyitayo Jegede with Jimoh Ibrahim ,urged INEC to correct any mistake they might have made. The monarch said,” we don’t want anything to disrupt the peaceful atmosphere of this state. In 1983, we lost some of our sons and daughters, we don’t want anything of such again. “The judiciary should also intervene and make sure that all parties get justice because we don’t want any injustice in Ondo State. The President should make sure that whatever needed to be done be done on this matter. Nobody can be governor through the back door. “ |
senatordave1:Show us Jimoh project in Ondo State and the benefits to the people of th state. |
senatordave1:If you are not in Ondo State stop saying what you don't know. |
senatordave1:Are you not aware that same INEC said jegede is candiate based on same high court ruling. The question to ask you, does Jimoh Ibrahim appeal that rulling. Hell no. Why is inec turning around to obey another high court ruling of same jurisdiction to back up Their Demicracracy coup de tat |
tuniski:It's no more $2.1 billion but now $15billion. Pastor Osinbanjo continue. |
Give it to judicial abracadabra. It all started from the fractionalization of the party platform. It reared its ugly head during the governorship primary. Recall how it deepened the internal cracks on the platform. And on each occasion, the spectre of judicial interlocutor left a cloud of amazement and confusion on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), its members and supporters, as well as, lovers of democracy. As such, just when the party seems to have woken from its bad dream to pursue genuine reconciliation and begin the painful journey of rejuvenation, the ghost of judicial madness returned to haunt the former ruling party. Not many commentators imagined that the apparition of the political pugilism between embattled former national chairman, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, and the caretaker chairman, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, would hover in Ondo State. It was the general expectation of most analysts that the incumbency of the PDP Governors’ Forum chairman, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, would put paid to any pretensions as to which is the authentic faction of the party. But as the date for the governorship primary election drew near, the Sheriff’s camp began some intriguing manouevres. Smarting from its loss of traction in the Edo governorship, the faction met a brick wall as a court of competent jurisdiction outlawed its plans to hold a parallel primary election in Akure or any part of the Sunshine State. Having been so declared an interloper, the disgruntled faction relocated to nearby Oyo State, where it held a dubious primary that threw up Jimoh Ibrahim as the controversial governorship candidate. The last that was heard about the Ibadan controversial primary was the promise by Sheriff to look into the complaints other aspirants observed against the process, particularly the authenticity of delegates at the election. Then A-Bang! MOST Nigerians, especially watchers of the PDP debacle, still wonder why the shock therapy unleashed on some justices was not extended to the a certain Judge that seems to have descended on the arena in the PDP leadership crisis. Ever since PDP commenced the process of trying to pick pieces of its crumbled structure after the loss of the 2015 presidential election, Nigerians have noted the exceptional intrusion of judicial pronouncements and rulings. But in the recent instances of adjudication on governorship selection squabbles, it has been a mixture of judicial ambush, excess and mischief. Contradictory court ruling, just like inconclusive polls have become a new feature of Nigeria’s electoral system. On October 14, exactly one month and two weeks to the governorship election in Ondo State, Justice Okon Abang, ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to (blindly) “accept and process for the purpose of its functions and activities in the organisation and conduct of the Ondo State governorship election only the nomination of Barrister Jimoh Ibrahim Folorunso…” The Federal High Court Judge did not stop there. He also directed INEC to “reject and jettison any other nomination form(s) submitted to it by any other person(s) apart from the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs/applicants, indicating that no other person, apart from Barrister Jimoh Ibrahim Folorunso, is the candidate of the 2nd defendant for the Ondo State governorship election.” Haba! For those who may not be conversant with the matter, Justice Abang’s orders came while ruling on a suit filed by Prince Biyi Poroye and Ademola Genty, chairman and secretary of PDP in Ondo State and their counterparts in Osun and Oyo States. How the matter concerned the governorship flagbearer in Ondo depends on the undercurrents and politics of power and influence between PDP and its rival, the All Progressives Congress (APC) that took over the commanding heights of national politics in May 2015. For the sake of clarity, it should be noted that Poroye and others had approached the court in search of enforcement of a previous ruling of the court in which they were affirmed as winners of the zonal congress of the party for Lagos, Ekiti, Ogun, Oyo, Ondo and Osun. It was known why the court ordered INEC to accept only the names of candidates from Poroye and Genty leadership as the authentic candidates of PDP for the Ondo governorship election. But the Nigeria Apex Court’s position on which organ of the party should send names of its candidates for an election is well known and celebrated. And so, did Justice Abang choose to interpret the laws according to his whims, knowing that an appeal could straighten out the ambiguities or merely to ambush the candidate of the other faction? Whatever the judge intended to achieve, the extant ruling as it affects the forthcoming governorship election in Ondo State has gone further to underscore the interesting state of affairs of Nigeria judiciary. Politics By Judicial Means JUXTPOSING Justice Abang’s orders with the continuing power tussle between APC and its defeated and diminished rival, PDP; it would be clear that the game has been raised to an ominous level, where court rulings are used to deflect or distract competitors. Examined in that light, it becomes probable that those who articulated the mischief interpretation wanted to set the stage for the eventual poll victory of whoever should emerge the runner up in the November 26 governorship election in Ondo State. This is so because, even pupil lawyers know that in the event that PDP carries the day as it appears set to do, in the election; whoever may come second between APC’s Rotimi Akeredolu and Alliance for Democracy’s (AD’s) Olusola Oke; would easily go to court to challenge the election, knowing that the court, by virtue of the Electoral Act, lacks the power to impose a candidate on a political party. Similarly, knowing that the process that threw up Ibrahim as governorship candidate, albeit in a faction of PDP, could not pass the credibility test of a genuine primary election; the imposition of Jimoh Ibrahim on the PDP may end up as a smoke in the wind.If the perfidy is sustained, it would go ahead to establish the high wire politics that politicians conscript judges to play, even if by proxy. Road To Infamy THE road to the present infamous ruling by Justice Abang could be said to have actually begun two months ago, when Senator Ali Modu Sheriff visited former President Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta. Although both leaders held a closed door discussion, what the public got from them was the public exchange in which Obasanjo called Sheriff a factional chairman, pointing out that when he was earlier invited to join PDP he did not come, only to come and take over a baby in the intensive care unit. The former president also noted that Nigeria’s democracy needed strong political parties, particularly in opposition, to make the system better. However, sources hinted that what Baba told Sheriff in the closet was sharply in contrast to his public admonition. The PDP reconciliation process took a turn for the better with both Sheriff and Makarfi camps addressing a joint press conference, where they announced their new found sanity. But those who saw the handwriting on the wall held the development in suspicion. With the recent crevice created by Justice Abang for Ibrahim, who is standing on the platform of his faction, Sheriff is waxing defiant, seeking to appropriate maximum stake in the PDP unification efforts. One of the conclusion reached by some observers after the Sheriff-Obasanjo meeting was that the undertakers are about to commence the final diminution of PDP. After he was invited to play the role of navigator for the APC, Obasanjo, who made a public show of the destruction of his PDP membership card, announced his withdrawal from partisan politics. It was said that the former president lost out during the appointment of ministers last year. Could it be that the Ondo governorship provides him another opportunity to have a say in the politics of Southwest, nay Nigeria? Does the ongoing effort to ensure that Mimiko does not leave a protégé, presage a large turf battle in the APC, regarding who gets relevant in the zone towards 2019? It is a well-known fact that Ibrahim, who acquired the sprawling National Insurance Corporation of Nigeria (NICON) business concerns, during Obasanjo’s administration, remains a trusted ally of the former president. That was as far as business and enterprise are concerned. But now, it seems the controversial businessman has become a mascot for Obasanjo to dethrone Mimiko from political prominence as he attempted against Bola Tinubu and Gbenga Daniel. Judicial Foolhardiness Vs INEC’s Instability THE present quagmire brought about by the judiciary in the Ondo governorship election, regarding the appropriate enrolling of the right PDP candidate, is not a novelty. It happened before in the intra-party dispute between Governor Okezie Ikpeazu and Dr. Sampson Ogah, both of Abia State chapter of PDP. In the same matter, which is now subject to appeal at the Supreme Court, the same Justice Abang, threw his knock-out banger of a ruling, sacking Ikpeazu and ordering INEC to handover certificate of return to Ogah. With similar gusto and haste, INEC had overzealously executed Abang’s order to the chagrin of most Nigerians. Then, in the case of Anambra Central Senatorial seat, in unbecoming zealousness, INEC decided to appeal the ruling of Justice Anwuli Chikere, which restored the right of PDP to field a candidate and participate in the rerun senatorial poll. A lot of people expressed dismay at what could be the interest of INEC to warrant the appeal. Consequently in the matter of listing prospective candidates for the November 26, Ondo governorship election, INEC departed from the path of vigilance to respond to Justice Abang’s order, not minding that the candidate in question did not emerge through a foolproof process. But all blames should not go to Justice Abang because, he ruled as he was expected, on the matter before him. The onus then lies on the party, which feels otherwise about the ruling to approach a higher court to re-examine the evidence based on the law and facts presented. INEC might have been misled to think that the Federal High Court, from which Abang’s ruling preceded, was superior in jurisdiction over the State High Court, from which the Makarfi faction obtained a restraining order. That may be why the commission, through its spokesman, Rotimi Oyekanmi, disclosed that it took the decision to replace Jegede due to a superior court order, adding that that necessitated the prefix ‘Court order’ before Ibrahim’s name. Justice Williams Olamide of the Akure High Court had restrained INEC from substituting Eyitayo Jegede as the PDP candidate in whatsoever way. The Judge had noted that “it would be out of order for INEC to replace Jegede’s name, pending the determination of the motion on notice as it would contravene the principles of equity, justice and fairness. But curiously Justice Abang of the Federal High Court, Abuja; had refused an application by Jegede in which he sought the court’s leave to appeal its ruling of October 14, 2016. Abang contended that section 31 of the Electoral Act only allows the party and not the candidate to contest the judgement, stressing further that having not taken part in the primary election conducted by the Sheriff group, Jegede lacked the locus for legal protest. That is the aspect of the whole set up that inspires commentators with the idea that Abang was exceeding the barriers of impartiality. And that judicial position therefore careened INEC towards an unpopular direction. Perhaps, suspecting that the present INEC under Prof. Mahmud Yakub, seems to lack the institutional backbone to rebuff untenable legal propositions and assert its independence, a pro-democracy group known as Coalition in Defence of Nigeria Democracy and Constitution (CDNDC), advised the commission to toe the path of established principles of law, particularly the decisions of Nigeria’s apex court. In a statement signed the conveners: Ariyo-Dare Atoye, Ilemona Onaja, Ojugo Onyeluka, CDNDC pointed out that such Supreme Court rulings as in Emeka vs Okadigbo and Ors (2012) 18 NWLR (pt1331) 55; Emenike vs PDP (2012) 18 NWLR (pt 1315) 556; Oguebego vs PDP, laid a clear foundation on which organ of the party should field candidates for an election. The group declared that the apex court was emphatic “that the appropriate organ of a party empowered to conduct primaries and submit names of its candidates for the purposes of general election is the National Executive Committee.” Based on the seeming instability of INEC, accentuated by its sudden decision to supplant Jegede with Ibrahim, most Nigerians found themselves wondering how Prof. Attahiru Jega would have handled what presented as a clever admixture of political intrigue and legal calisthenics. When he is not found vacillating before taking crucial decisions as in the case of Kogi State governorship and Edo, INEC’s Prof. Yakub is found taking hasty decisions that end up pouring hot water on his tenure. That was what the Abia PDP legal contestation and the present Ondo debacle have left on INEC’s public image. [b]Mimiko’s Shock Vs Omoboriowo’s Magic LOOKING at recent developments in Ondo f[/b]rom a wide-angle lens, it is obvious that forces at play form concentric circles of intrigues. There is the eaglet political actors in APC who want to use the Ondo governorship to prove that they know their onions as far as politics in the Southwest is concerned. These new players who are being enabled and energized by powers outside the geopolitical zone seem to be angered by the recent rapprochement being brokered by former Lagos State governor, Tinubu and other Southwest leaders, especially Mimiko. They tend to believe that Mimiko had a hand in the uproar and confusion that tried to emasculate the emergence of the APC governorship candidate, Akeredolu. Stoking similar quarrel in PDP, they felt, was therefore a veritable way to give it back to Iroko. In the midst of widening gulf of suspicions and speculations, Obasanjo’s loyalists are looking ahead to ensure a foothold for 2019, in readiness to ensure that if come comes to become in APC, they could present an alternative bloc in the Southwest for negotiations with other counter interests. As things stand in Ondo, unless Jegede is restored, nobody could hazard a guess on where the momentum for the November 26 poll lies. Yet, even as a perceived level playing ground has been unwittingly created with either of the four eligible platforms in one challenge or the other, the possibility of federal might supervening to make the difference becomes very high. But how far the scenario would re-enact a repeat of Akin Omoboriowo landslide in 1983 is left to be seen. Governor Mimiko may have that ugly electoral experience at the back of his mind when he visited President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa. Expressing shock at INEC’s decision, the governor stated that what the commission did “had no basis in law or politics.” He noted, “This action potentially can cause a breach of peace. It can cause conflagration in the state and that is why as the Chief Security Officer of the state, I have come to alert Mr. President of the potential danger of this injustice so that we can nip it in the bud.” Are we about to witness another round of Wild, Wild West in a repeat of history that could crash Nigeria’s democracy? There is no doubt that the forces at play are blinded by ego and mad chase for political ascendancy. INEC has a crucial role to play in averting the dark clouds in Ondo. The commission should have walked the narrow path of leaving PDP out of the loop, pending the final word from the Court on the position of its rightful candidate. Or, taking the practical and objective lane, INEC could have pointed out the fact that since it did not monitor the governorship primary purportedly held outside Ondo State, it would not list such a defective candidate for an election it was the final umpire. This way, INEC would have shown that it has legs to stand on and eyes to see, but above all, that the conduct of its affairs has limits to outside interference. In the long run, the commission must have by now articulating areas of need for legislations to strengthen its mandate. If what a high ranking APC chieftain said recently, that contending with two opposition governors in Southwest is too much for the party to bear is anything to go by, the ruling party wants to win Ondo by all means and at all cost. That is where the recollections of Omoboriowo and 1983 governorship chase would serve a useful end. http://m.guardian.ng/features/policy-a-politics/ondo-2016of-inec-ballet-and-judicial-interlocutor/
|
Appeal update The court of appeal seating for the second day has ruled that all the appeal will be consolidated and therfore direct all party to put all their breifing in written on Monday for judgement. More details later |
Johnnyessence:God and sleep Aketi is resting with his first lady in the other room |
Johnnyessence:Is that why Aketi send his rogue to beat Oke people pasting posters in Owo on Sunday |
Johnnyessence:PDP is not having hope yet you are here spending your whole time on PDP thread. You see your life |
Keballl:He's looking for evidence that I'm telling him info from Aketi town language. He refuse to interpret but continue to sprew noise. They just keep shouting PDP is dead yet they cannot leave a dead party alone |
Johnnyessence:Interpret that or you keep quiet |
Johnnyessence:Ughun yhe mgha soju ghe wghe ma ni joko ghe je ghen. That's a statement in ogwo language. Interpret that. Then we will continue |
Johnnyessence:We shall see Is that why Aketi is not campaigning. Time will tell |
Johnnyessence:Am talking to you asbthw event unfolds. If you need evidence I will give you |
Ratello:Even His Owo local government. He's not pulling anything |
Ratello:Akeku sorry Aketi ti keeeeeeti. He's not pulling anything. That is why they want to use abang to cause trouble |
Abang is about to receive another Appeal punch Akure people we know you are peace loving please e gba suuuuru laye Abaaaaangiiiiiiii ti fe gba Ese (punch) from appeal again |
Akure Youth give peace a chance. Let Appeal deliver their judgment please |
matador86:Hear yourself out again. Is abang an appeal court. Case is already at at appeal. They only go back to give Abaang appeal notification |
An Akure High Court on Thursday restrained the Independent National Electoral Commission from substituting the name of Eyitayo Jegede as candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party for the November 26 governorship election. The Ahmed Makarfi faction of the PDP had gone to court to seek an exparte order to stop the recent move by Jimoh Ibrahim, the candidate produced by the Ali Sheriff faction. Mr. Ibrahim wants INEC to list him a the authentic candidate on the strength of a ruling of a Federal High Court in Abuja. On Thursday, Justice William Olamide of the Ondo court while ruling on the exparte motion, noted that it would be out of order for INEC to replace or substitute Mr. Jegede’s name while the motion on notice was still pending. He said such would contravene the principles of “equity, justice and fairness.” He directed the PDP to ensure service of the order granted, which is the motion on notice and originating summons on INEC before the next date of hearing fixed for November 7. “It is hereby ordered as prayed. The defendant/respondent is hereby restrained either by itself, chairman, commissioners, agents and servants, officers or privies or through any person or persons, howsoever from changing, replacing, removing, substituting or in any manner tampering with the name, Eyitayo Jegede SAN as the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in the governorship election slated for November 26, 2016 pending the determination of motion on notice,” the judge said. “In the interest of justice and fair hearing, the Claimant/Applicant is hereby ordered to ensure service of the order herein granted, the motion on notice and originating summons on the Defendant/Respondent before the next date of hearing.” The final list of candidates for the election is expected from INEC before the end of Thursday. PREMIUM TIMES gathered that INEC was on the verge of reaching a decision on the crisis rocking the party before Thursday’s court order. The two candidates are laying claim to the ticket to contest for governor of Ondo State after they emerged from two separate primaries. With barely one month to the election, the desperation to emerge victorious has heightened undermining the reconciliatory efforts by leaders of the party. www.premiumtimesng.com/regional/ssouth-west/213817-ondo-court-restrains-inec-replacing-pdp-governorship-candidate.html/
|
Mathemagician1:It's over 2 years now and you have not get over the shock of Barca going back to PDP. Are you one of the corrupt cabals surrounding Buhari ni. How do you know PDP did not want him. Who told you his SS brothers did not want him. Anyway truth is always bitter. |
TonyeBarcanista:How can he be clean. If Buhari is clean I challenge him to bring Dasuki to court tommorrow. If Buhari is clean I challenge him to tell nigeria what and what military hardware bought by Gej |
Afam4eva:Heyaaaaaaaa I am a sorri hoooooo Who did this to you. Are you one of the corrupt cronies and crooks associates of PMB that's it's paining you like this. |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 (of 272 pages)
