Family › Re: I Am Turning Into A Tenant In My Husband's House by Fezzolee: 10:48pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
STOP POSTING PRE WEDDING PICTURES MAKE VILLAGE PEOPLE NO SEE WHERE TO START, YOU LAUGH ON PRE WEDDING PICTURES AND BE SAD IN THE REAL DEAL.. SORRY O, GOD HELP YOU IN JESUS NAME AMEN. |
Family › Re: "Village People Can Die Now" - Man As He Boasts About Brother’s White Wife by Fezzolee: 8:05pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
AFTER GOLD DIGGING, HE COMES BACK AND WHEN HE GIVES YOU MONEY, YOU WILL START SMILING, MUMU GIRL, MEN ARE NEVER GOLD DIGGERS, IF YOU WANT TO SEE GOLD DIGGERS, IT'S IN ALOT OF GIRLS Amarabae: Men and gold digging. #smh |
Family › Re: "Village People Can Die Now" - Man As He Boasts About Brother’s White Wife by Fezzolee: 8:02pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
GUY ALL THESE MUMU GIRLS NO GO UNDERSTAND. jaxxy: Getting a green card isnt gold digging na. |
Family › Re: "Village People Can Die Now" - Man As He Boasts About Brother’s White Wife by Fezzolee: 8:01pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
LOL SEE YOUR MOUTH, MUMU MAN Ajewealth123: Typical gold digging. Lazy gold ,digging family |
Jokes Etc › Re: Funny Picture Thread To Spice Up Your Christmas by Fezzolee: 7:39pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
L. O. L |
Politics › Re: Ike Ekweremadu Eats With Widows As His Wife Gives Them Money,Rice & Wrappers by Fezzolee: 4:50pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
Anumaanu... Ewu hausa NgeneUkwenu: To Deceive IPOB yoots no hard now... |
Celebrities › Re: Red Beret: Wizkid Vs Simi, Who Rocked It Better? (Photo) by Fezzolee: 12:43pm On Dec 25, 2017 |
Lol People funny, everyone is a cultist |
Celebrities › Re: Phyno, Flavour & Zoro Slammed By Born Again Lady: You Aren't Fit To Sing For God by Fezzolee: 11:23am On Dec 25, 2017 |
MANY OF YOU HAVE BIBLE IN YOUR PHONES, AND HAVE PORN IN YOUR GALLERIES, OR VIEW IT ONLINE, ALL NO BE SIN  ME DEY SIN BUT BABA GOD DEY FORGIVE N HELP ME, NA HIS MERCIES ALL THE WAY... SO SHUT UP N MIND YA OWN BUSINESS. |
Celebrities › Re: Phyno, Flavour & Zoro Slammed By Born Again Lady: You Aren't Fit To Sing For God by Fezzolee: 11:16am On Dec 25, 2017 |
Hahahahahah Lol you don mad... Lol nice one doyinisaac: Why not let GOD speak for himself??or you are now GOD personal assistant?? |
Christianity Etc › Re: "Why Do We Celebrate Jesus Birthday When He Never Celebrated It?" - Daddy Freeze by Fezzolee: 11:14am On Dec 25, 2017 |
Who tell you say na today them born Jesus  I celebrate him everyday |
Health › Re: ‘I Sold My Kidney For N15m In Malaysia’ by Fezzolee: 2:23am On Dec 25, 2017 |
The money no fit finish sinaj: People have mind o!
What will he do when the money finish. |
Travel › Re: Accident Kills Many In Kano (Graphic Photos) by Fezzolee: 2:07am On Dec 25, 2017 |
Go protect us in Jesus name Amen, 2017 weda you like it or not, we all will see your end and end of many years to come in Jesus name Amen. |
Travel › Re: The Stairs Used To Climb Out Of Arik Airplane (Photo) by Fezzolee: 2:04am On Dec 25, 2017 |
Them go soon use ladder internationalman: second hand goods don't usually come with all parts intact.. |
Phones › Re: Facebook Adds Face Recognition Feature Which Notify Users When They Are Spotted by Fezzolee: 3:53pm On Dec 24, 2017 |
Lol i laugh, no worry, Nigerian boys  ? Them go hack am as soon as possible LOL FORGET THAT THING yeyerolling: Scammers wont lik this. Those using american marines, custom officers and fine gals pics to scam see una life |
Christianity Etc › Re: Muslims Storm Egyptian Church, Attack Worshippers, Call For It To Be Demolished by Fezzolee: 3:42pm On Dec 24, 2017 |
maryjames9: Islam. Islam. Islam. Among thousands of Religion on the world, that Religion is one of a kind. Where ever you have that Religion thrive, safety and security of other Religion are never guaranteed and to think that they carry out most of their attacks on Fridays after their prayers to some "supposed Al merciful, caring, loving god" is alarming. ALL MUSLIMS ARE NOT TERRORISTS BUT ALL TERRORISTS ARE MUSLIMS!!!! |
Education › Re: Top 5 Courses That You May Regret Picking In 2018 Jamb by Fezzolee: 3:38pm On Dec 24, 2017 |
Bastard jamb |
Politics › Re: Senator Dino Melaye Receives 25 Liters Of Petrol As Xmas Gift - Picture by Fezzolee: 3:29pm On Dec 24, 2017 |
Nothing like Nigeria being better, betterment is an individual things, if e better for you, na just you and your family. |
Crime › Re: Kidnapper Caught Chanting Incantation, Spewing Alligator Pepper On Kid Head by Fezzolee: 7:13am On Dec 24, 2017 |
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TV/Movies › Re: 50+ Examples Of Cartoon Logic That Will Make You Facepalm by Fezzolee: 12:54am On Dec 24, 2017 |
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TV/Movies › Re: 50+ Examples Of Cartoon Logic That Will Make You Facepalm by Fezzolee: 12:51am On Dec 24, 2017 |
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Crime › Re: How To Identify A Yahoo Plus Guy This Christmas - 10 Ways To Identify by Fezzolee: 12:45am On Dec 24, 2017 |
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Politics › Re: Chinedu Obidigwe Distributes 200 Motorcycles And 600 Bags Of Rice (Photos) by Fezzolee: 11:22pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
dermmy: I dnt knw why these people distribute motorcycle who motorcycle and rice epp. Why not embark on a programme that would alleviate the poverty of the masses. Nigerian politicians distribute motorcycle to the masses but they don't want their children to become motorcyle riders. SEE YOUR VAGINA MOUTH WEN YOU USE DEY TALK SHIT, WHO YOUR COMMENT EPP? PEOPLE WITH BAD MOUTH, IF IGBO MAN DO GOOD, THEM TALK RUBBISH, IF E DO BAD, NA DIE, JUST GO TO BED N REST. |
Politics › Re: The Full Story of Chibok Girls' Release and Ransom Paid - Wall Street Journal by Fezzolee: 11:18pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
LRNZH: The Kidnapping
Nearly three years earlier, close to midnight on April 14, 2014, the girls of the Chibok school sat up in their bunk beds.
A group of men in pickup trucks were bearing down on the small town of Chibok, firing rockets and assault rifles. A dozen or so soldiers stationed nearby ran for their lives.
There was no electricity in the single-story schoolhouse and the girls had only flashlights to guide them. Outside their dormitory windows, they could hear the rumble of approaching engines.
Many of their parents and neighbors had fled to the nearby mountains, some wearing nightgowns. Hiding behind shrubs and in the crevices of rocks, the adults watched the fighters swarm toward their target—the Chibok school. Parents furiously dialed their children.
Cowering in his boxer shorts on the side of the mountain, Samuel Yama saw his phone light up. It was his sister, Margaret, a student. “She could not even speak and I was telling her to flee,” he said; “She was in tears...then the call cut off.”
Outside, the girls heard voices.
“Don’t worry! We are soldiers. Gather!”
The school’s elderly security guard had fled. The girls didn’t know what to make of the men ordering them to come into the moonlit courtyard.
“Don’t worry, we are soldiers,” they repeated.
The students, some carrying Bibles, tiptoed through their rooms toward the voices outside, swimming through darkness.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR901_BOKOCH_M_20171220152559.jpg A view of the small town of Chibok, where militants abducted 276 schoolgirls from their dormitory in 2014.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR491_BOKOCH_M_20171219180834.jpg A house in Chibok. Corruption, military coups and a limping economy have made northern Nigeria one of the world’s poorest regions.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR494_BOKOCH_M_20171219181400.jpg The twisted metal frames of bunk beds are all that remains of the Chibok Government Secondary School. After abducting its students, Boko Haram burned it to the ground.
For centuries, Chibok had been a place of refuge, remote and shielded by mountains. Families had settled there in the 1700s to escape the slave trade. It was among the last outposts to fall under British colonial rule.
In 1941, a missionary couple arrived from the Illinois-based Church of the Brethren. Chibok became a majority-Christian hamlet in Nigeria’s Muslim heartland, a place where people of both faiths lived side by side.
By the turn of the 21st century, corruption, military coups and a limping economy created a wave of unemployment across the impoverished north. Thousands of disillusioned young men—including jobless college graduates—began listening to the teachings of radical Islam.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WS511_backgr_4U_20171221163959.jpg
In Maiduguri, a city of roughly one million people 80 miles from Chibok, a baby-faced cleric named Mohammed Yusuf built a following by declaring that Western education, or boko, was haram, sinful. The earth was flat, the cleric argued, and evaporation was a lie—Allah caused rain. Western education was a scam to distance Nigerians from their maker, he said, and democracy was an affront to God.
As Boko Haram’s ranks swelled, Yusuf and his lieutenants toured the northeast in buses strapped with speakers, urging Muslims to sever their ties to the government and follow Shariah law. During a 2009 street battle between his followers and police, Yusuf was handcuffed and pulled into a station. A crowd watched as officers shot him in the chest.
The leader who took charge after Yusuf’s murder pursued a more radical path. Abubakar Shekau, a bearded and bellowing cleric, burned with anger and wrath, propagating an apocalyptic vision.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR508_BOKOSH_P_20171219182655.jpg A still from a video released in October, 2014 by Boko Haram’s commander, Abubakar Shekau. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Nigerian government sent envoys to reason with Shekau. They came back in disbelief. He demanded all of Nigeria adopt Shariah as a precondition for peace talks.
Shekau redirected Boko Haram into the countryside, shedding its reclusiveness in favor of a full-blown insurgency. His army commandeered tanks and antiaircraft guns from the military and exacted revenge on communities that resisted them.
In hourlong video sermons, Shekau threw tirades at Queen Elizabeth II and Abraham Lincoln, rambling, cackling and jabbing his finger into the lens. “We will kill whoever practices democracy!” he screamed. “We should decapitate them! We should amputate their limbs! We should mutilate!”
“Kill, kill, kill!”
By the early 2010s, Boko Haram was regularly slaughtering moderate Muslim leaders and dispatching suicide bombers to crowded markets. Kalashnikov-wielding militants hanging off the backs of scooters attacked villages, spraying bullets indiscriminately at adults and children and setting everything on fire. Tens of thousands died. Hundreds of thousands fled.
Schools closed by the hundreds. Some were burned down by their own students, converts to Shekau’s army, now one of the world’s most deadly. To keep feeding its ranks, Boko Haram began kidnapping children.
In their red-tin-roofed schoolhouse, the Chibok girls were learning that the earth was round. “PROOF THE EARTH IS SPHERICAL,” the students were told to copy in their notebooks. “Pictures taken from spacecraft at great height clearly show the curvature of the earth.”
It wasn’t just this school’s curriculum that violated Shekau’s vision—it was the mixing of faiths. Its students included Muslims and Christians. Their parents were neighbors and friends.
The students seemed destined to become northeastern Nigeria’s next generation of educated women. Hauwa Nkeki, a star volleyball player, was studying to be a nurse, or maybe an economist. Elizabeth Joseph read the Bible at night by lantern. Dorcas Yakuba passed the days writing love letters to a boy who had nicknamed her “the remote control of my life.”
Naomi Adamu was one of the school’s more serious students, “a hardworking girl,” as her mother, Kolo Adamu, described her. She also had a goofy sense of humor she shared with a few close friends. As she prepared for final exams, she was looking forward to the next stage of her life.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR518_BOKONA_M_20171219184628.jpg Photos of the Chibok girls taken before their kidnapping. The girl in the yellow dress is Naomi Adamu, one of the 103 captives released. PHOTO: GLENNA GORDON
Outside the school grounds, Chibok had come to feel less safe. Earlier that year, Boko Haram torched six nearby villages. Distant gunfire sometimes thundered. One day, a school administrator found a piece of paper on the ground warning of a Boko Haram attack, but dismissed it as a prank.
The girls didn’t live in fear, but understood the gathering threat. Families seeking sanctuary in Chibok brought stories of the insurgents’ brutality.
In March, three weeks before the attack, Shekau appeared on YouTube, threatening the region’s young women: “Girls, you should return to your homes…In due course we will start taking women away.”
The night of the attack, when the girls emerged in the courtyard, they could see the men were not soldiers. They wore unkempt beards, flip-flops and tattered uniforms. Several were raiding the school cafeteria, stealing sacks of rice, beans and pasta. Others poured gasoline on the school to torch it.
Boko Haram had not come to abduct the students. It had come to steal the school’s brickmaking machine. The insurgents had been on a kidnapping spree, and their camps faced a housing shortage.
A commander fired his rifle in the air and demanded to know where the machine was kept. Once they found it, the fighters hoisted it onto a truck.
As they prepared to leave, one militant, motioning to the students, asked a fateful question. What shall we do with them?
A few weeks earlier, Boko Haram had barricaded dozens of schoolboys in their dormitory at the Federal Government College of Buni Yadi and burned them alive. At other colleges, they had tossed grenades into the dorms while the students slept.
The unit’s commander turned to the girls. “Shekau will know what to do with them,” he said.
The fighters ordered the students to climb into their trucks. The teenagers linked hands and arms as they stumbled through the dark.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR470_BOKOBY_P_20171219175023.jpg Oby Ezekwesili, second from right, at a recent meeting in Abuja. The former government official led daily protests on the girls’ behalf and popularized the famous #BringBackOurGirls Twitter hashtag.
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-WR764_BOKOTW_M_20171220120050.jpg The cast of “The Expendables 3,” posing on the red carpet during the 67th Cannes Film Festival. PHOTO: VALERY HACHE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES what a photo shop |
Politics › Re: The Full Story of Chibok Girls' Release and Ransom Paid - Wall Street Journal by Fezzolee: 11:17pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
Nigeria with alot of drama, government go form one thing call am chibok girls, bring back our girls, which girls them dey bring back since how many years, the girls never turn grandma finish?? No worry, una go soon hear word. |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Nigerians Would Never “Go Back To Their Huts” In Africa - Trump by Fezzolee: 11:10pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
GameGod: If you ever wondered JUST what kind of a visceral bigot Trump is, read the quote from the article and then read the article...................I am BEYOND furious. This man is so deeply racist, amoral without shame, selfish, sexist, and useless piece of garbage.
Donald Trump is a certified Racist!!! He is an unfeeling psychopath that should be in a white straight jacket instead of living in the White House.
Next time read the article before spewing trash, mumu. Most of those immigrant fuckt*rds are biaflans. them migrate and make good lives for them selves, you sit down for you face me i face you compound dey press naira land... Mumu man, you are a. Real mumu man... Anu mpama. |
Travel › Re: Passenger Ties Goat Along With Luggage On Top Of A Bus While Travelling (Photos) by Fezzolee: 10:00pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
So they should pay for 1 seat for the goat abi?  |
Nairaland General › Re: LASEMA Uses Crane To Rescue Man Stuck In Mud At 3rd Mainland Bridge(photos) by Fezzolee: 9:56pm On Dec 23, 2017 |
policy12: Wetin for happen...we for don turn him to statue like this TRIBAL ISSUE HERE! |