Fidinwala's Posts
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please what is the best Engine Oil for Pontiac Vibe All Wheel Drive |
ok thanks |
Goodday please what is the cost of clearing a Pontiac vibe 2003/2004 model, Toyota matrix 2003/2004 model, Toyota Camry 2000,2001 and 2003 models and Peugeot 406 2000 model assuming the cars are to be bought in from Cotonou. thanks. Sir please I am waiting for the responses to the above questions. thanks |
Goodday please what is the cost of clearing a Pontiac vibe 2003/2004 model, Toyota matrix 2003/2004 model, Toyota Camry 2000,2001 and 2003 models and Peugeot 406 2000 model assuming the cars are to be bought in from Cotonou. thanks. |
Thank you very much Sir. Which model of the 406 peugeot is within 800 to 900. that has automatic transmission |
peugeot 307& 406 (1999, 2000,...) & Toyota camry 2000 to 2003. all must be automatic transmission. thanks and waiting |
toyota 1999, 2000 & 2003 camry and peugeot 406 or 307. All should be automatic transmission. thanks and waiting. |
what car can i get for #1.2million |
what car can i buy for #1.2 million |
what can i buy for #1,200000million |
how much is a 2003/04 matrix and pontaic vibe. thanks |
goodday pls how much is 2003/04 toyota matrix and pontaic vibe of the same year . |
nice try suggestions on the next vlogging considering that you will marketing your blog/site, try and do some background check on the propose visit as this will help to define the anticipated outcome to draw more viewers. As in this case, i was expecting to see you showing more than one place visited in search of your desired choice and price. Good work. |
apply via jamb to study Surveying & Geoinformatic preferably ESUT.Enugu State University of Science & Technology. After graduating and Nysc look for a registered Surveyor office for pupilage, then write to SURCON informing them of your intention to commence pupilage in the office of the the registered Surveyor and once it's approved by the council the date of approval signify the commencement of your pupillage. the next phase entails some steps ...... later |
HBD wishing u more year ahead. |
happy for you brother. I feel so pain when I read through your sad story. |
good mor. how has the current situation between naria and dollar affect the price of cars in cotonou. |
Too bad waiting fr d change |
Moses Ochonu, a US-based professor of history, captured the prevailing tedium in a recent post on Facebook. “And the EFCC’s catch and release circus goes north,” wrote the cerebral Nigerian academic. “This time the target is former Kebbi Governor, Usman Dakingari. Like Suswam, Akpabio, and numerous others before him, he will return home after he completes his part in the drama. All he has to do is play along with the elaborate performance. No prosecution let alone conviction. And if the modified script includes a prosecution, rest assured that there will be no conviction. If there is a conviction scene in the movie, it will be followed by a paltry fine.” Many Nigerians had expected that the Buhari Presidency would, for one, dust up, and finally act on, the Halliburton scandal. This is an internationally well-known case in which Halliburton executives plied several Nigerian political figures with $182 million in bribes. Halliburton forked over all that cash in a bid to secure contracts worth as much as $6 billion in Nigeria’s liquefied natural gas sector. Jeffrey Tesler, a UK lawyer who facilitated the bribes, was subsequently sentenced to 21 months in jail. In addition, he was ordered to forfeit close to $150 million to US authorities. Albert Stanley, head of KBR Inc., a Halliburton affiliate, received a two and a half year jail term, and a $10.8 million fine. Halliburton and its affiliate admitted wrongdoing, and paid fines of $579 million to the US government for violating the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). If Nigeria were serious about law enforcement, then every single Nigerian official who took Halliburton’s cash would have been prosecuted, jailed and fined. Instead, no Nigerian has faced serious prosecution in the Halliburton scandal. Last July, as President Buhari made an official trip to the US, there were reports that he had asked for a review of the Halliburton file. Three months later, there’s no action, no further word. It’s so disheartening, this seeming relapse into political timidity, moral compromise, the syndrome of sameness. Yet, I have the sneaking feeling that this serves us right, a welcome price for our national habit of believing that it’s up to God or some vaunted strong man to solve all our problems – while we quaff Orijin, gorge on nkwobi or orishirishi, and obsess over matters of religious or ethnic jingoism. – WWW.sahararepoters.com |
President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration may have fallen prey to the political syndrome of sameness. In other words, his dispensation may well be firmly set to run on the same track as his predecessors’. Five months into the Buhari Presidency, there is a sense, even among his most fervent fans, that the expected momentum had dwindled – with little or nothing to show for it. Nigerians and the world have witnessed the demystification of a president who was billed as the very scourge of the corrupt, whoever they may be, however high their status. Today, five months into the Buhari Presidency, there’s little evidence that Nigeria has become an uncomfortable zone for those who most deserve to be docked for cutting down their country through embezzlement, money laundering and other forms of corruption. The one thing that Mr. Buhari was supposed to do well – that even some of his political adversaries conceded to him – was tackle corruption. Some even went as far as deeming him both allergic to corruption and to anybody who reeked of corruption. Many Nigerians fantasised that President Buhari would bring a new kind of vigour to the fight against corruption. The kindest thing that can be said about the expected new spirit is that it remains to be seen. The anti-corruption president has not done a single thing to invigorate the cause of arresting the plague. He has not sent a bill to the National Assembly proposing the establishment of courts devoted to cases of corruption. He has not prescribed any radical change in the way the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) carries out its mandate. In five months, he has not found time to speak to Nigerians about a new bold initiative to tackle corruption or to foster a new civic awareness of the tragic cost of corrupt practices. But it gets worse. Like it or not, Mr. Buhari is the face as well as dominant spirit of his political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). Under his watch, in Kogi and Bayelsa States, the APC chose as its governorship candidates two men who have active cases of corruption in Nigerian courts. Both men had been governors before, their records far from stellar. Even if the party were privy to solid information of the two men’s innocence, why not respect the judicial process? Or was it the case that the party suffered a drought of candidates unburdened by the taint of corruption? How could Mr. Buhari stand pat as his party made choices that mocked what he, as a man, presumed to stand against? But to ask that question is to become aware, immediately, of the president’s direct implication in troubling choices. It’s not lost on Nigerians, including President Buhari’s most inveterate champions, that the president spent more than four months to saddle Nigerians with a curious, if not decidedly mediocre, ministerial line-up. In a country that’s never lacked for talent, how would President Buhari justify his selection of several ministerial nominees who are defendants in corruption cases? In the first few months of the new dispensation, associates of the president loved to regale Nigerians with references to instances of monumental corruption by officials of the preceding administration. In one instance, Governor Adams Oshiomhole claimed that US officials had provided information about one minister who pocketed $6 billion. Five months later, the Buhari administration has brought no single serious case against former President Goodluck Jonathan or any of his officials. About a month ago, there was great excitement among Nigerians over the possible prosecution of former Petroleum Minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke. Remarkably, it took British officials, not the EFCC, to make any move against the former minister. I am not aware that Nigerian prosecutors have been able to cobble up a coherent case against |
Ikenna351:Lion King you're personifying a car I guess it's out of your love for Lions. |
The op is an idiot . That you have an encounter with some bad ESUT student does'nt mean all graduate from the school are bad. I am a proud ESUT graduate yes there is need for improvement just like every other school. |
PPAngel:calling someone wife ASHEWOE too bad especially coming from a lady |
fidinwala:Help out plss any one |
good day house pls do any 1 have tears of the sun to share for free. i tried downloading from sites i saw through Google and i have been finding it difficult |
It very painful to see women been disgrace in this manner. it is understandable that they stole but while naked them, yes, may be they can be asked to carry the clothes they stole around the market before handing them to the police but why naked them, the guys that are involved should be punish. |
do u know d cost of a ben 230 kompresor |
fidinwala:Oga Tadeus please answer me.
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Goodday, what is the price of a very neat 2000 model of W202 benz, with original custom duty. pls see picture as attached below.
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ZACHIE:hahaha hahaha |
RIP he represent my senatorial zone in d senate and speaking base on what i have observe from my people in UTURU, ISUOCHI and the likes that man has done notting. |