Farem's Posts
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madridguy: |
Drop a line to wish her well. She celebrated her 37th wedding anniversary yesterday with her ever-young sweet-heart. Happy Wedding Anniversary!! !
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To realise this lofty ambition of yours, I advice you to.... Visit Sambisa forest nackedly!! !! |
Ipob tout elected councillor. Sign of the things to come. |
What a childish thread! When has mere display of NLC flag on one's dashboard make one's vehicle NLC's? So all vehicles with the Nigerian Airforce belongs to it or it's employees. Lazy journalism! !!! ! |
omooba969:Wetin concern ipob in this? The last I checked ipob region no dey Niger Delta |
jcross19:Is this poo you have that made you copied the whole. This is most zombistic and buffonic in intent and character. |
Rayhutar:Sorry, it's the end |
shevon:You also got me thinking! How I wish you can relate with the years in question, you wouldn't have added naira symbol to the already and perfectly compiled information. 6k is same as 6. 00k(no attempt to think that, that 6 ever means #6. It's SIX. ZERO - ZERO KOBO). same goes for 8.45k to 9k (EIGHT POINT FOUR - FIVE KOBO TO NINE KOBO) . This is incomprehensible to those who cannot imagine the blessed era being refer to here or who are just too young to think it ever existed. I believe you are there now. |
This was sent to my page and I believe it should make the FRONTPAGE for the purpose of history and education. History of fuel price increases in Nigeria Gowon, 1973: 6k to 8.45k (40.8%) Murtala, 1976: 8.45k to 9k (0.59%) Obasanjo, October 1, 1978: 9k to 15.3k (70%) Shagari, April 20, 1982: 15.3k to 20k (30.71%) Babangida, March 31 1986: 20k to 39.5k (97.5%) Babangida, April 10 1988: 39.5k to 42k (6.33%) Babangida, January 1, 1989: 42k to 60k Private vehicles. Babangida, December 19, 1989: moved to uniform price of 60k (42.86%) Babangida, March 6, 1991: 60k to 70k (16.67%) Shonekan, November 8, 1993: 70k to N5 (614%) Abacha, November 22,1993: petrol price drops from N5 to N3.25k (-35%) Abacha, October 2,1994: N3.25k to N15 (361.54%) Abacha, October 4,1994: price drops from N15 to N11(-26.67%) Abubakar, December, 20, 1998: N11 to N25 (127.27%) Abubakar, January 6,1999: N25 to N20 (-20%) Obasanjo, June 1, 2000: N20 to N30 (50%) Obasanjo, June 8, 2000: Petrol price reduced to N22 (-10%) Obasanjo, January 1, 2002: N22 to N26 (18.18%) Obasanjo, June to October, 2003: N26 to N42 (23.08% Obasanjo, May 29, 2004: N50 (19.05%) Obasanjo, August 25, 2004: N65 (30%) Obasanjo, May 27, 2007: N75 (15.38%) Yar’Adua, June 2007: N65 (-15.38%) Jonathan, January 1, 2012: between N138 to N97 .President buhari N97 To N86 to N145 . This is just the beginning... |
Can someone help describe what's going on with Mr Femi Fani - Kayode in this photo?
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I don't know what's going up here. Can somebody describe this scenario?
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I don't know what's going up here. Can somebody describe this scenario?
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This Igbochukwu. |
modelmike7:Give us this day our stolen funds- Looter to lootee |
[quote author=donhils post=45530897]Glo is always forcing others to do good. Remember the days of per minute billing?[/quote Tiwa n tiwa, as yoruba will talk |
1 trillion naira squandered in 8 years? When you are able to compile how many trillions of naira was WELL UTILIZED by Delta state government in the last 17 years, I will take you serious gridlocky Igbinedion, Ibori and Predecessor have all made a saint out of oshi baba |
dunkem21:You know so much that you can recollect two of your forebears who worked with him as esusu collectors and book keepers. No be so? |
Reski:As an APC supporter, I also join you to apologize gej for spending trillions of Naira in subsidy which would have been used to build refineries with ease. Former president Jonathan, I apologize you again |
dainformant:. ..to meet the 70-phantom virgins promised in hell fire |
FemiOlarinde:I tell you even the hausas are being considered wiser with the way these people reason these days |
HateU2:None of the above. She is just a ring bearer! |
olubama:Oga, try and appreciate little thing. How much do you think an hospital is built? Hospital is not a self-contain apartment io. Sani hss been an activist all his life, comparing him with fellow politician senators, he is an icon |
Wetin concern me? So far Saraki don dey enjoy im own |
DaBullIT:They will not believe you. With right cheek, they will say it's a lie and propaganda. And with the left cheek they will be wondering why not use the money recovered |
1Tkester:So incorrigible! |
texazzpete: |
TPAND:You are concerned about ECONOMIC REform yet your sensibility can not see the ECONOMIC DEforms perpetrated last couple of years. The deformities (what some refer to as transformation) before any meaningful reform can take place. Economic impurities must be dealt before we can have economic peace. Weeding period is not always palatable. Those that Satan raised to mess our God given era of surplus must vomit our yams. Is that clear? |
Home News News Ekiti: Seven catholic schools shut, church sues govt May 1, 2016 Kamarudeen Ogundele, Ado Ekiti Ekiti State Government has shut seven schools run by the Catholic Diocese of Ekiti for failure to pay the Education Development Levy. Under the new tax regime, pupils in primary and secondary schools are to pay N500 and N1,000, respectively. The catholic schools had requested the government to exclude its schools from the payment, a request that was rejected. The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Ekiti, Most Reverend Felix Ajakaye, who broke the news in Ado Ekiti, accused the state government of being insensitive by shutting the schools when students were preparing for their National Examinations Council Examinations Ajakaye said, “I am concerned about the propriety of imposing any development levy on pupils and students in Catholic mission schools in Ekiti State, moreover when our schools are paying various levies and taxes demanded by both the local and state governments respectively. “The closure of the schools is very painful personally to me. They are writing exams and government is closing down their schools. That is insensitivity.” The Diocese operates 15 primary and seven secondary schools in the state. Confirming the development, the State Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mr Jide Egunjobi, said, “It is true we shut the catholic schools that failed to pay. Some of them have paid and are operational. We only shut those that refused to pay. “We all agreed to the development levy at the education summit, so, there is no going back.” Meanwhile, the Catholic Diocese has sued the Ekiti State Government for imposing education development levies on pupils in its primary and secondary schools. In an originating summons filed at Ekiti State High Court by the Incorporated Trustees of the Catholic Diocese of Ekiti, the plaintiff asked the court to declare that imposition of levies as illegal, unconstitutional and null and void. It contended that the action violated Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Basic Education Act 2004 and Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) Law. The defendants are the Attorney General of Ekiti State and the Commissioner for Education. The Church asked the court to determine “whether every child of primary school and junior secondary school age in Ekiti State is not entitled to free and compulsory basic education under Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Education Act, 2004 and Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board Law.” “If the imposition of education development levy or any tax or levy on pupils and schools in Ekiti State, including the claimants schools, by the defendants, does not violate Section 2 of Compulsory Free Universal Basic Education Act 2004 and Section 19 of Ekiti State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) Law. “Whether the defendants could impose education development levy or tax on pupils and schools “without a law validly passed by the Ekiti State House of Assembly” in view of some sections of the Nigerian constitution.” While praying the court to declare that the defendants could not impose education development levy or tax on pupils and schools, the palintiff also sought an order restraining the defendants from further demand of the levy. The Church also sought an order of mandatory injunction directing the defendants to endorse and approve the applications of students of its schools for the 2016 NECO examination pending the determination of the substantive case. It also sought a similar order for its pupils in the various primary schools run by the church in Ekiti Diocese. |
omowolewa:As long as there are no yams in their cupboards |
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