Eteka1's Posts
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IkpuNnegiEwu44:Na only APC get Reps for NASS? |
flyingpig:What did they say Akpabio has done wrong? Cos me I couldn't see anything concrete against him. |
1.150 cash call me 08065186202 |
Ogonimilitant:You can track all flights worldwide with apps like flightrader24. You need no intel to do that. |
alfredilly:Pls remind me of the name of that their exceptional goalie that year. |
Kizzygentle:That year! |
What's your last price Sir |
Pls show the side body pictures |
Is it still available? |
vanunu:You that is not a slave, how much do you have compared to Arthur Exe? |
Na Tinubu cause am. |
yomifola:Very good car. I own one and it's a great car. |
bigfish3k:Pls explain |
Is it first body? Buy and drive? |
ZKOSOSO:It looks more like an assassination cos nothing was taken from them. |
Racoon:Pls tell me, is it a crime for a successful businessman to donate money to his party and party faithfuls? Of course the money to be given out to the party faithfuls for mobilization was much so it had to be brought by the bank for security reasons. |
trippleKAY:Those guys are real hackers, just that it's difficult to escape the FBI once you have been spotted. |
[quote author=honeyB2018 post=91517596][/quote]Is it a crime if a businessman donates his personal money to his party members, moves it with bullion van? |
JonDon12:tell us what he stole. |
The entire COVID 19 response strategy in Cross River State is in complete disarray, nothing works. Some days ago, news broke that some sick people at the UCTH have tested positive and I have been waiting to see or hear that the Cross River State Ministry of Health has stepped in, isolated the patients, done meticulous contact tracing, isolated the contacts for monitoring and testing etc. None of this has been done. All we hear is political noises. I fear for the elderly in our society. May God keep them safe. |
He changed tone when Jonathan lost to Buhari. He was most likely being sponsored to start the agitation by those who lost out of power in 2015. |
The legislators will want to hijack the scheme so that they would put the names of their boys, drivers, extended families etc. |
SmartProf:And how is that your problem? |
Good. |
TRASH. |
Side pictures pls |
Is it first body? Pls show me side views. Thanks. |
flyingpig:Till after elections. |
Esseite:My Brother I understand your arguments, but the truth is that APC has decided to keep Edo. |
APC will win Edo. |
The following as a story by Iyad El Baghdadi, a former inmate at a Dubai Prison. "I was imprisoned in Al-Sadr prison in the UAE before my forced expulsion from the country. You can read . In brief, Al-Sadr prison was the most racist place I had ever experienced in my life up to that moment. Now note that I was held in a general holding cell block before being transferred to another cell block used for deportations. Both of these blocks are considered “temporary detention” , and as far as I know, that’s how the authorities get away with the massive institutionalized abuse that happens there. There was a kind of “nationality hierarchy” in the prison - Arabs such as myself got less cramped cells, often could cut in line, sometimes got to eat in our cells (rather than in the courtyard), and even got some goodies such as cigarettes or lighters or phone calls (I’m not a smoker myself, but my cellmates were). More importantly however, Arabs rarely got insulted or slapped or punched or spit on - which is kinda standard practice for Asians, especially Bangladeshis and Pakistanis. In an ethnically mixed country such as the UAE, a brown guy like me can be confused for a Pakistani. I remember once in jail I had to make a clinic visit (I had pretty bad asthma), and I didn’t follow the marching instructions right and had a growling prison guard charge at me to hit me. When he heard me say something like “excuse me” or “sorry” in Arabic he stopped in his tracks, smiled, and said “You’re Arab? Why didn’t you tell me you’re Arab?” Basically had I not been Arab I’d have been fair game. I said Arabs “rarely” got beaten up - but it does happen. An Egyptian man who occupied the cell next to me once insulted a guard, and was quickly taken outside to the courtyard, chained to a pole, and “disciplined” (beaten by several guards before being returned to his cell). Bangladeshis seem to be at the bottom of the hierarchy - routinely punched, slapped, kicked, spat on, and held in very cramped cells. I counted 47 men cramped in a cell intended to hold 10 people (10 beds). There were probably more, since some of them were out of sight round the corner. I heard the prison guards and policemen share the expression “al binghal bighal” (البنغال بغال) - translates to “Bengalis are mules” - among each other. The sound of slaps - of a human hand slapping a human face - rang regularly in the prison halls, especially when prisoners were being “processed” (brought in, or switched between blocks). Prison guards and policemen seem to be instructed not to show any kind of sympathy to the prisoners. Noticing that I don’t look like I belonged there, they only inquired about my story in hushed whispers in the corners of halls. The kind of food you eat is so terrible that I went from 40 waist to a 34 waist in two weeks. I had to literally hold my pants up with my hands a lot of the time (you’re not allowed belts). I remember an elder Arab man pointing to the food and asking a younger Arab man: “If you were a dog, would you eat this food?” (Interestingly, that elder Arab man had lived his entire life in the country, and didn’t know why he was in jail. There were “higher instructions” to expel him but no court case against him. When I entered prison, he was past his first year in that situation.) You are allowed to buy food (there’s this kinda “canteen” cart that comes twice a day when the prisoners are out in the courtyard), but the food is overpriced and of terrible quality. The same canteen sold very cheap cigarettes and very expensive pants (which I bought, but they were of such poor quality that they ripped on the first day then I tried to, um, walk in them). Hygiene is pretty bad and everyone stinks. We had to chase rats out of our cells on a couple occasions. You can shower of course, but the water pressure is very low (it’s just a trickle), plus it’s scalding hot during the day and very cold during the night (so you gotta make do). Bathroom situation was… terrible, and you’re not allowed anything to… clean yourself with. Yet the UAE government propaganda is so strong that it almost amounts to gaslighting. I remember an elderly Egyptian cellmate who, even after living in these conditions for a few days, remarked “How can this be? UAE prisons are like hotel rooms! They’re like 5 star hotels!” It was a pathetic sight to witness a man almost lose his mind, not able to square what he’s been told all his life vs the reality he’s living. The man collapsed a couple days later and had to be carried off to the prison’s clinic. There’s a lot more I can say - after my release from prison I was summarily expelled from my country, had nowhere to go and was stranded at an airport for a month. I ended up documenting my observations in a journal that ran 200+ pages. But suffice it to say that prison in the UAE was the most overtly and unapologetically racist place I had ever seen up to that point. Especially if you’re not an Arab. Source; https://www.quora.com/What-is-prison-like-in-the-United-Arab-Emirates
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Very wise and intelligent man. |
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