Farem's Posts
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Kobojunkie:God bless you. That's a good knockout for a deluded idolater. . Exodus 20:3-4 (KJV) Thou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: 1 Timothy 2:5 For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus; |
ONE YEAR AFTER: This is the real reason pharmacist akuma is denied bail below
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Peacemaker5128:It isn't troublesome and cursing when your so called 95 percent are relying on your so called 5 percents schools. Isn't time you guys stopped breeding criminals and terrorists into the world in the name of promoting this terrorist ideology you are calling religion? |
HigherEd:" Imagine a school like Landmark university in Kwara - just look at that beautiful school, fantastic road network and buildings with consistent electricity. All built with over 15 billion naira from Christian women" Well said . |
DaVinciii:You are operating from the spirit of bitterness, envy and frustration! If not you would have quoted the next verse. Matthew 23:9-10 (KJV) And call no man your father upon the earth: for one is your Father, which is in heaven. Neither be ye called masters (teachers) : for one is your Master even Christ. I ask you: do you address anyone as your teacher? Then you are also guilty! |
ijustdey:This is nothing new to them. Their spiritual inspiration - the grand-terrorist himself - Mo, had raping as his pastime. |
greymiles:Generational curse is truly strong on you. If not your family misery will not be blamed solely on one person - Tinubu, who left a political office more than 12 years ago. Yet your political office holders have eaten deeper what's left in your own future yet you have been so brainwashed not to see that but tinumbu |
You want him to be Jesus Christ? with him, I go
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PureMe01:If truly you took your drugs, you won't be linking ortom or benue issue with Yoruba |
Herders flee as Amotekun arrests 100 cows for violating grazing rules Published on March 22, 2021By Abdul Babajide Over 100 cows were over the weekend “arrested” by the men of the Ondo State Security Agency, otherwise known as Amotekun Corps for flouting the open grazing laws of the State. The herders, who were suspected not to have registered with the State government, took to their heels upon sighting the operatives of the Amotekun Corps. DAILY POST gathered that the cows were caught grazing along the busy Akure/Ilesa highway. Disclosing this, the Commander of the Corps in the State, Adetunji Adeleye stated that the move was part of efforts at curbing crimes in the State and as well enforcing the directives of the State government that the streets and forest reserves be rid of unregistered herdsmen. According to Adeleye, the cows were intercepted and arrested at the boundary of Osun and Ondo State, adding that it took his men about 30 kilometres walk to control the cows to the corps headquarters in Akure, the State capital. “I don’t want to narrow it on the issue of capturing cattle. I would want to say it’s a way of reducing crime. These cows were actually blocking the major road leading to the State capital,” he said. The Corps Commander also emphasized that with the herders engaging in illegal grazing, kidnappers use it as a ploy to waylay victims. “One of the occupants in the vehicle that was blocked called our distress line. And within few minutes, our men were on ground. “We should take note that our men are in all the 18 local government areas and we are on 24 hours patrol. We arrived the scene promptly. “The culprits who sited us on arrival ran away as they controlled the cows to follow them, but we were only able to control them back,” he said. https://dailypost.ng/2021/03/22/ondo-herders-flee-as-amotekun-arrests-100-cows-for-violating-grazing-rules/
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edochie12:...and it means akpụ right? |
[quote author=dollytino4real post=100089557]are no security in the church?[/?quote] So what is this one called? Entertainment? |
This entitlement and parasitic mindset that make Muslims want to run to Christian countries when there is big trouble and absence of peace in their Islamic country? Why not run to another Islamic country? They will not even open boarders for them. How many refugees from Syria did UAE, Saudi Arabia open doors for? They crave for USA, Britain, Germany etc |
gawu1:Your retort is nonsensical. Any sane-looking candidate that meets the minimum requirement is qualified to be admitted. That should be a plus on the part of these blessed school that though, one girl though bearing sikira- one of the names associated with spiritual slaves, is still admitted. Now that they want to be insane...out! |
lexy2014:? I have been laughing at these politically dumb proponents of "let him resign". Is osinbajo a minister or an appointee that must resign before contesting for the office of the president, constitutionally? How many of your governors or deputy governors resigned for contesting? BTW, I just confirmed that Atiku is an Anglican from Mbaise while buhari is a Fulani from daura. So-so political blind |
TheRareGem1:Even those who are supporting Satan in this life claim he singlehandedly lured ⅓ of the Angels to hell as an achievement |
Madmadrevo:How old were you when he held sway? They failed to tell you he auctioned our patrimonies to his foreign proxies. So much that OBJ was alarmed at the magnitude of the fraud perpetrated in so short a period. All these are chronicled in objs book ; my watch. Your Atiku never verbally or legally challenged such verdict. Instead, he was hiring people to help him beg OBJ.. That's your Atiku! |
[s] Nonexistent:[/s] |
No one has ever delivered so much in and for Nigeria in 51. If you know, please name. |
Omooba77:Paedophilic and parasitic generation. It runs in their genes. Convert and rename your Quranic and almajir covens |
15-YEAR-OLD NIGERIAN STUDENT BEAT US, UK, CHINA, AND OTHERS TO WIN GLOBAL MATH COMPETITION By Tiffany Silva 7 days ago Fifteen-year-old Nigerian student, Faith Odunsi, beat US, UK, China, and others to win global math competition. The West African teenager made herself a part of history when she won the Global Open Mathematics competition. Although she beat other contestants from Africa, Europe, Asia, Australia, and the United States, Odunsi didn’t immediately think that she was going to be the winner until she answered more questions that the other contestants in the final round of the competition. Odunsi said in an interview with The Punch that, “My heart raced but I felt relieved.” As the competition winner, Odunsi walked away with a $1,000 prize. Photo Credit: @PFM939 The 15-year-old is in her final year as a high school student at the Ambassadors School, Ota Ogun State. Odunsi’s father is a doctor and mother, a businesswoman. And of course, both of her parents are extremely proud of her win. The budding mathematician states that she gets her math genes from her father. Do you want to know more about this amazing young lady? Check out a snippet of her interview below with The Punch. What is your name and how old are you? I am Faith Odunsi. I am 15 years old. What class are you in and what is your state of origin? I am in SS3. I am from Ijebu in Ogun State. You recently won the Global Open Mathematics Tournament. How does this achievement make you feel? It makes me happy and honoured. How did you react when you were announced as the winner? I was already tense, so I just smiled. I was too anxious to dance. I was tense because it was a tough competition. Which other countries fielded contestants in the tournament? I saw pupils from the United States (of America), China, Ghana and others. At what point were you convinced that you would win? It was at the point when we got to the end of the questions and I got the answers correctly. My heart raced but I felt relieved. You went through some stages before the international tournament. Can you tell us about them? In the first stage, there was a computer-based test and we had to answer many questions in one hour. My score in the test was 66. The second stage took the same format and I also scored 66. The quarter and semi-finals were on Microsoft themes. We were asked questions and we put in our answers; the first to put in the correct answers got 10 points. Which of those stages was the toughest for you? I think the first was the toughest because I was just getting used to the CBT and timing. Were you at any stage scared that you might be defeated by other pupils? Yes, I was – at the semi-finals. I entered a tiebreaker with a female pupil named Adrija Panda. I think she was from one of the Asian countries. https://bckonline.com/2021/03/13/15-year-old-nigerian-student-beat-us-uk-china-and-others-to-win-global-math-competition/amp/
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gawu1:Did they drag you down to their schools by your necks? They way out is always and already open - out! |
[s] igboarenice:[/s] Their usual nonsense! Why must you pathetic and religious parasites always wait for another people's things to become yours and never think of doing things for yourselves and others? |
Why is it difficult for muslims to attend Muslim schools where they can dress according to their religion? In most discourses on this raging issue, the above question keeps coming up BUT rather than answering it, they parry it and go elsewhere. Truly, why can't they go to their own established schools, after all they claim to be many. What's your own candid response |
eagleu:Do they ever care to build for their uncountable almajiris children? I see the fight shifting to the universities in less than ten years from now. Again, do you see them establishing any today? It is rato 8 to less than 2 |
UmuEri:...because they are there babies |
TINUBU’S STATEMENT ON THE HERDER CRISIS The herder-farmer dispute has taken on acute and violent dimensions. It has cost too many innocent lives while destroying the property and livelihoods of many others. It has also aggravated ethnic sentiment and political tension. Despite the efforts of some of those in positions of high responsibility and public trust, the crisis has not significantly abated. Sadly, others who should know better have incited matters by tossing about hate-tainted statements that fall dangerously short of the leadership these people claim to provide. We all must get hold of our better selves to treat this matter with the sobriety it requires. Because of the violence that has ensued and the fretful consequences of such violence if left unabated, we must move in unison but decisively to end the spiral of death and destruction. Only when the violence and the illogic of it are halted can logic and reason prevail. Until the violence is rolled back, we cannot resolve the deep problems that underlie this conflict. We will neither be able to uplift the farmer from his impoverished toil nor move the herder toward the historic transformation which he must make. Yet, as vital as security is to the resolution of this matter, we must realize security measures alone will not suffice. Enhanced security may be the necessary first step, but it cannot be the only step. Nor do we resolve this by hitching ourselves to emotional, one-dimensional answers. More to the point, those who cast this as exclusively a matter of ethnic confrontation are mistaken. This is no time for reckless chauvinism of any kind, on either side of this dispute. This matter is not ethnic in factual origin or actual causation although in the minds and hearts of too many it has become ethnic in recrimination and impulsive action. There have been sporadic disputes in the past but this one is more severe. The reasons for the greater violence of this current dispute are myriad. Economic hardship and its resultant dislocation, proliferation of weapons, generalized increase in criminality, and weakening of social institutions all play a role. Desertification, increased severity and length of the dry season, diminution of water resources, impairment of land fertility and population growth also contribute in no small measure. Thus, any durable solution must get at most, if not all, of these issues. Farmers have a right to farm their land unmolested. Herders have a right to raise their livestock without undue interference. However, when conflict between these groups arises to such an extent, we must set forth clear principles and policies to remove the tension, in order to allow both to proceed toward their stated goals and to live in harmony and according to their respective rights. Just as I cannot go into your house and take your shirt because I do not have one of like colour, no one can destroy the crops of a farmer or seize the cattle of a herder simply because such destruction sates their anger or their selfish, short-term interests. If such a condition were to hold, then all would turn into chaos; all would be in jeopardy of being lost. To destroy the crops or seize the property of the innocent farmer or herder is nothing if not an act of criminality. Here, I must state two fundamental realities. One has been previously mentioned by me and others as part of the solution. The other reality is hardly discussed. First, the situation of the herder is becoming untenable. Their nomadic ways fall increasingly in conflict with the dictates of modern society. This way of life is centuries old and steeped in tradition. We can never condone or accept violence as a valid response to any hardship. However, we all must recognize and understand the sense of dislocation caused by the sudden passing of such a longstanding social institution. I mention their dislocation not to excuse violence and other excesses. I raise it to underscore that we must realize the true complexity of this crisis. What is happening has been terrible, but it is not due to any intrinsic evil in either the herder or the farmer. The calamity now being faced is borne of situational exigencies. It is but the tragic outcome when often desperate, alienated people are left too long unattended and when their understanding of the modern socio-economic and environmental forces affecting the very terms of their existence is incomplete. An ethnically fuelled response will be to vociferously defend the nomadic way believing this tack will somehow protect the herder and cast the speaker as an ethnic champion. However, careless words cannot shield the herder from relentless reality. Such talk will only delude him into believing that he can somehow escape the inevitable. We do both herder and farmer grave injustice by allowing the herder to continue as he is – fighting a losing battle against modernity and climate change. In that fight, desperation causes him to flail and fight the farmer, who too is a victim of these impersonal forces. Second, to help the herder and leave the farmer unattended is unfair and will only trigger a resentment that tracks already heated ethnic fault lines. The times have also been perilous for the hardscrabble farmer. He needs help to survive and to be more productive in ways that increases national food security. Farm productivity and incomes must be enhanced. Soil enrichment, better irrigation and water retention as well as provision of better rural roads, equipment and access to modern machinery are required to lift him above bare subsistence. Both innocent and law-abiding farmer and herder need to be recompensed for the losses they have suffered. Both need further assistance to break the current cycle of violence and poverty. In short, the continued progressive reform of many of our rural socio-economic relationships is called for. Based on these strategic observations, I recommend the federal government convene a meeting of state governors, senior security officials, herder and farmer representatives, along with traditional rulers and religious leaders. The purpose of this meeting would be to hammer out a set of working principles to resolve the crisis. After this meeting, governors of each state should convene follow-up meetings in their states to refine and add flesh to the universal principles by adjusting them to the particular circumstances of their states. In addition to religious and traditional leaders and local farmer and herder representatives, these meetings shall include the state’s best security minds along with experts in agriculture (livestock and farming), land use and water management to draw specific plans for their states. To accomplish this goal, wise policy must include the following elements: 1. Maintain reasonable and effective law enforcement presence in affected areas. The proposed reform of the Nigerian law enforcement apparatus towards state and community policing can help in this regard. The legislative and administrative measures required to make this a reality should be expedited. In addition to alleviating the present farmer-herder crisis, this reform will also bolster efforts against the banditry, kidnapping and robbery plaguing communities across the country. Governments need to employ new technology and equipment to enhance the information gathering/surveillance and response capabilities of law enforcement. 2. Help the herders’ transition to more sedentary but more profitable methods of cattle-rearing. Unoccupied public land can be fenced into grazing areas or ranches and leased to herders on a very low-cost, nominal basis. The leasing is not intended to penalize herders. Rather, the nominal fee is intended to ensure the herders are invested in the project and incentivized (by reason of their investment) to use the land provided. This aspect will also mitigate any resentment over herders being given land for free. Government, in turn, being a responsible lessor, must help with supplemental feed and water in these areas. This will enable herders to better maintain and care for their livestock thus enhancing their incomes. Herders can augment income by becoming suppliers to the leather goods industry. Additionally, herders can also develop a more symbiotic relationship with farmers by, for example, trading animal compost to the farmer in exchange for animal feed. 3. Assist farmers increase productivity by supporting or providing subvention for their acquisition of fertilizer, equipment and machinery and, also, by establishing commodity boards to guarantee minimum prices for important crops. In the medium to long term, resources must be dedicated to establishing better irrigation and water catchment systems to further improve farm productivity and mitigate the dire impact of flood and drought cycles brought about by extreme climatic conditions. 4. Establish a permanent panel in each state as a forum for farmers, herders, security officials and senior state officials to discuss their concerns, mitigate contention and identify trouble and douse it before it erupts. We are a populous nation of diverse ethnic groups. We are a people of potential richness, yet to escape present poverty. We have resources but not wealth. Often, our words speak of hope and fear in the same breath. While we all hope and strive for the best, many fear that there is not enough of what is needed to go around and that they will be left out. In such a situation, harsh competition and contest are fated to occur. In the unfolding of this social dynamic, one group of actors has been pitted against another over dwindling water and fertile ground. The confrontation has resulted in the needless loss of life and destruction of property. If left to itself, this situation may spread and threaten the progress of the nation. It could call into proximate question the utility of the social compact that holds government and governed in positive bond, one to the other. We have a decision to make. Do we attempt the hard things that decency requires of us to right the situation? Or do we allow ourselves to be slave to short term motives that appeal to base instinct that run afoul of the democratic principles upon which this republic is founded and for which so many have already sacrificed so much? In the question itself, lies the answer. SIGNED Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. March 13, 2021. https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/448626-farmer-herders-crisis-tinubu-says-attack-on-herders-farmers-criminal.html
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Juliusmalema:I bet you, you can never smell this among Yoruba. We dey always know the place and people. A |
Can you live in this newly completed scary Vancouver 49-story residential tower on Granville Street in Vancouver, Canada?
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