₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,328,370 members, 8,435,393 topics. Date: Sunday, 28 June 2026 at 03:15 PM

Toggle theme

Flyoruboy's Posts

Nairaland ForumFlyoruboy's ProfileFlyoruboy's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 (of 25 pages)

PoliticsRe: Why Most Swners Want Nnamdi Kanu Killed. by Flyoruboy(m): 5:47pm On Dec 24, 2015
Vulu:
Now why is your Oba not standing trial just like kanu since all men are equal in the eyes of the law(pls don't evade this question).
Guy, quote me anywhere. I could care less what happens to Akiolu for that careless statement he made. He's man enough to defend himself. I'm not the DSS. Maybe y'all should petition them to arrest him or something. Like I said, he's already been dragged to the ICC. Whatever happens to him as a consequence of making the statement in question is his problem. undecided

http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/188829-icc-investigates-oba-of-lagos-for-anti-igbo-remarks.html
PoliticsRe: Why Most Swners Want Nnamdi Kanu Killed. by Flyoruboy(m): 5:20pm On Dec 24, 2015
Vulu:
Did the Igbos ask that Oba be hanged when he threatened Igbos in lagos? When you want to tell a story start from the beginning, not half way because you want to tailor a certain narrative.
Oh please! There are more than enough comments on this same forum of Igbo threats and disdain towards the Oba Akiolu since that incident, yes, with many even calling for his head! He's even been dragged to the ICC by Igbos for the careless statement, so don't come at me forming any Saint Paul. Bottomline, Kanu has severally threatened Yorubas with death and mass murder and made it abundantly clear that he hates us. Even you must have heard such invectives. Even Ojukwu wasn't that uncouth and caustic. I personally wish upon Kanu everything he's wished on the Yoruba race, no apologies. Kapish!
PoliticsRe: Why Most Swners Want Nnamdi Kanu Killed. by Flyoruboy(m): 3:22pm On Dec 24, 2015
Why are you people such hypocrites? ? Who doesn't know Kanu's Hateful and murderous intentions towards Yorubas. What are you all now expecting in return? A bouquet of flowers? Even for those of us that may generally support an agitation that predates even Kanu himself, we will never support a man who has virtually declared war on our race. Hell the fvck no! @Vulu, kettykings, Duru1, etc
PoliticsRe: REVEALED! Enugu School Where Teachers Rarely Come To Work - The Sun by Flyoruboy(m): 9:13am On Dec 16, 2015
lipsrsealed Choi. Na those kind teachers be proper GHOST WORKERS. cheesy
CrimeRe: Kidnappers Arrested After Killing Their Victim (Graphic Photos) by Flyoruboy(m): 8:58am On Dec 16, 2015
Wickedness!!
PoliticsRe: The CRUDE OIL NEMESIS IN NIGERIA! by Flyoruboy(m): 8:48am On Dec 16, 2015
Udmaster:
keep laughing. You citizen of a Third world country.
Lol. Why do you sound so.. angry and bitter? Has it crossed your mind, if only for just a split second, that perhaps your hypothesis is off the mark? Think about it. Whoever is inflicting this 'nemesis' must be callous and very unfair to the Igbos he's supposed to be avenging coz they are also suffering the same afflictions as the rest of the country. Why? That alone has destroyed/discredits your premise.

On a lighter note, which kind sacrifice we for come use appease the gods of nemesis cheesy? Blood of Jesus, blood of bullocks, abi chicken, which?
PoliticsRe: The CRUDE OIL NEMESIS IN NIGERIA! by Flyoruboy(m): 8:35am On Dec 16, 2015
Udmaster:
I am talking about the Entity called Nigeria.
Lol. I think you've answered my question. Thanks. smiley
PoliticsRe: The CRUDE OIL NEMESIS IN NIGERIA! by Flyoruboy(m): 8:30am On Dec 16, 2015
Udmaster:
nop. The Nemesis is because of an injustice melted out against the Igbos.
Ok, but are the Igbos also suffering as a result of this 'nemesis' you insist is being meted on the entire Nation? That is the question I'll like you to answer.
PoliticsRe: The CRUDE OIL NEMESIS IN NIGERIA! by Flyoruboy(m): 8:25am On Dec 16, 2015
Udmaster:
every region have its own share of corrupt politicians.
I am talking about the injustice and marginalization of the IGBOS in thiz country.
When Crude oil waz at $100, what does it achieve with it? NOTHING.
That is Nemesis.
So if I understand you correctly, this your 'nemesis' is no respecter of tribe or region, and is therefore afflicting every region/geopolitical zone in Nigeria, including the Biafraans? ?
PoliticsRe: The CRUDE OIL NEMESIS IN NIGERIA! by Flyoruboy(m): 8:14am On Dec 16, 2015
But come OP. What about your SE leaders that have contributed in no small measure to the current state of under-development in your region? Talking about the Chris Ubas, the two Orjis of Abia, Mbadinuju, Uwazuruike, Nnamani, Nwobodo, etc. Are they also a collective consequence of this 'spiritual' nemesis? Remember they are from the tribe of your alleged victims o.
PoliticsRe: Dasuki Exploring Plea Bargain - Vanguard Newspaper by Flyoruboy(m):
Khd95:
Im just wondering what would ve happened to these yams if pdp had won d electioncrycry
Ah, God forbid! We for just wake up one morning and hear say Oga Jona and his fellow crooks don sell Naija to Benin Republic to raise money, since Dem for don already loot the small change wey remain by then. cheesy cheesy
PoliticsRe: Revealed: Buhari Is Sick, Visited London Bridge Hospital On The 1st Of Dec,2015 by Flyoruboy(m): 7:20am On Dec 16, 2015
gringringrin Come on. You guys can do better than this. That 'evidence' looks forged. In any case, so what if he's sick? Last time I checked he's human, and humans (irrespective of their age) are prone to fall sick from time to time. As long as he's able to effectively carry out his functions as president what's the problem?
PoliticsRe: Ngeneukwuenu Is From South West by Flyoruboy(m): 7:19am On Dec 12, 2015
Old2020:
Of course we all know he is a yoruba man. Including TonyeBarcanista
Keep quiet there hypocrite. You sef are a confirm Igboman claiming Akwa-Ibom. cheesy
PoliticsRe: Seun Needs To Be Reported For Free Speech Attacks by Flyoruboy(m): 2:00pm On Dec 11, 2015
Lol. See painment grin Smh. You people need a j-o-b, for real. cheesy
PoliticsRe: Gov Willie Obiano's Legacy Projects In Awka photos by Flyoruboy(m): 1:50pm On Dec 08, 2015
Enesi47:
since I know nairaland na only Igbo they post their yeye infrastructures here, waiting una get when other rejoin no get mtchewwwwwww ! Nua Iranu too much joor
LOL. Guy, leave them to celebrate their modest gains. Just one estate for Arepo in Ogun state will make that single estate they keep showing from different angles (and indeed the entire estates in the SE) look like a village smiley. Even in Ibadan sef, the kind modern apartments wey dey liter the landscape pass anything wey dem dey jubilate over. Just allow them, pls.

Jokes EtcRe: Lagos,Onitsha Or Aba? Where Can You Find A Compound with Toilet issue Like This? by Flyoruboy(m): 1:12pm On Dec 08, 2015
No-brainer. It's definitely somewhere in Igboland. Na Igbo people dey wear that kind 'abada' wey those women tie around body like that.
PoliticsRe: Meaning Of Biafra In Igbo by Flyoruboy(m):
keally:
. Can you please mention any of the South Eastern governors that has complained about the 18k
If they have not 'complained', why is Rochas still owing workers and you all are raining abuses and curses on him daily? Other SE governors (Enugu and Abia) are even lamenting about needing more bailout funds than they got from the FG sef.

http://pulse.ng/local/in-enugu-state-needs-n32-2bn-to-pay-workers-id4218361.html -- yet it got only 4.2billion.

Gov. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu State has said that his administration needs more than N32. 2 billion to off-set the arrears of workers’ salaries, gratuities, pensions and subventions.
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/09/abia-bailout-cant-cover-payment-of-accumulated-gratuities-nlc/

“The government applied for N39 billion but was given N14.152 billion because the governor even wanted to clear the gratuities but we have a constraint. What the governor may not be able to handle is gratuity. We are praying for more bailout.
PoliticsRe: Reasons Why The Yoruba’s And Hausa's Are Very Happy Being Nigerians by Flyoruboy(m): 9:01pm On Dec 06, 2015
VickJames:
Can you compare the amount collected by these states to that collected by Ogun, Osun, Ondo and Oyo states.
Is that supposed to be a Jamb question? ? ? huh Why don't you go ask the Federal govt. her criteria for deciding how much to dole out to each respective state? It's like asking me to compare the federal allocation collected by states in both regions. huh Besides, even your own SE states that are beneficiaries are still complaining of the said disbursed bailout not being adequate to cover their bills.

http://pulse.ng/local/in-enugu-state-needs-n32-2bn-to-pay-workers-id4218361.html -- yet it got only 4.2billion.

Gov. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu State has said that his administration needs more than N32. 2 billion to off-set the arrears of workers’ salaries, gratuities, pensions and subventions.
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/09/abia-bailout-cant-cover-payment-of-accumulated-gratuities-nlc/

“The government applied for N39 billion but was given N14.152 billion because the governor even wanted to clear the gratuities but we have a constraint. What the governor may not be able to handle is gratuity. We are praying for more bailout.
PoliticsRe: Reasons Why The Yoruba’s And Hausa's Are Very Happy Being Nigerians by Flyoruboy(m): 8:48pm On Dec 06, 2015
VickJames:
if you really want to start comparing states, please dont compare anambra state and osun state again, please.

there has never been a time since last five years that the igbos complained of hunger and starvation in anambra state.

but osun state has one the highest tears in the world this year. from lawyers, to lecturers.

i remember a lecturer who fainted when he saw his alert to be 150naira, that is to show you how poverty has killed a lecturer in your state.

we will not go into the different sectors of the economy of the state.

almost all the states in the southwest are debt because they have too many people to feed than anything.
Story for the gods. You are a typical Yee.b.oman, who thinks out of his anus. The moment I busted your sorry a$$ you decided to shift the goal post. You and your kinsmen are nothing but a hypocritical lot. Who gives a flying funk about your erosion-ravaged Anambra? Anambrans (and to a lesser extent Abia) are renowned iliterate traders, compared to their Education-oriented/seeking Imo and Agric-leaning Ebonyi counterparts. Without a doubt, Anambrans account for the bulk of gala hawkers and traders daily invading the SW as economic migrants, upon all your noise. Until you show me an Osun native migrating to the SE as an economic hustler/migrant, please just STFU. I know for a fact that a portion of the next batch of Igbo traders heading towards Osogbo will be from your overhyped Anambra. Yinmu.
PoliticsRe: Reasons Why The Yoruba’s And Hausa's Are Very Happy Being Nigerians by Flyoruboy(m): 8:39pm On Dec 06, 2015
VickJames:
which states ran to the federal government for bailout more?

i think these states must be from southwest, or am i lying?

southwesterners are funny o.
http://sunnewsonline.com/new/seast-states-workers-groan-as-bailout-fund-fails-to-offset-salary-arrears/

FROM GEORGE ONYEJIUWA, EMMANUEL UZOR, PETRUS OBI, OKEY SAMPSON, AKIN ALOFETEKUN, EMMANUEL ADEY­EMI, ROSE EJEMBI, LAYI OLANRE­WAJU, AND MARIAM AGBOOLA

With the dole out of bailout funds to states by the federal gov­ernment, the dust raised by backlog of salaries and sun­dry debts owed workers in the South-East states is yet to settle.

In Imo State, Governor Rochas Okorocha is still down with workers’ debts and the fear to incur more in terms of salaries has pushed him into concessioning parastatals, which has pitched him against the organized labour in the state.

In Ebonyi State like Imo, Governor Dave Umahi is having hectic time with the orga­nized labour who are insisting that he must continue to pay them the 50 per cent increment put by former Governor Martin Elechi at the twilight of his administration.

In [/b]Enugu state, though the workers are not agitating openly as the civil servants among them are not owed, they are nevertheless grumbling over the arrears owed their counter­parts in parastatals in the state.[/b]

Thus the governors of the states are in a quandary on how to come out from the fi­nancial quagmire with some of them already adopting drastic measures while some others are gearing up to taking low risk loans.

In Imo State, the State University Teaching Hospital (IMSUTH) has been shut down for the past three months as a result of the strike embarked upon by doctors for lack of facili­ties, inadequate manpower and non-payment of their salaries by the state government.

This ugly state of affairs had spurned the dis­traught medical students to take to the streets in demonstration.

Similarly, the strike embarked by the state chapter of the Parliamentary Staff Association of Nigeria (PSAN) over the non-payment of their seven months’ salary arrears has forced the state legislators to adjourn for a recess.

This is excluding the pension arrears owed retired civil servants in the state.

Thus, the inability of the state government to settle the backlog of salary arrears clearly indicates that the bailout fund given to the state by the Federal Government has proved inade­quate to solve the financial woes of the state.

Indeed, this is not the best of times for Gov­ernor Rochas Okorocha as there are no indus­tries and enterprises that could substantially help to put money in circulation in the state.

As it stands in the state, salary payment pattern is deliberately staggered with some ministries and parastatals receiving salaries in long-drawn arrears

while others receive nothing.

For instance, while workers of the Imo Broadcasting Corporation (IBC) are owed three months arrears, their counterparts in the Imo Transport Corporation

(ITC) are still being owed salaries for up­wards of seven months just as the employees of the Imo State Hospital Management Board are also owed three months of unpaid salaries.

The same is for the employees of the Spe­cialist Hospital (formerly, General Hospital) Umuguma, who are five months down with­out salaries.

Indeed, Governor Okorocha agreed that government parastatals in the state are be­ing owed an upward of five months arrears, but explained that his concept of parastatals was such that the establishments should be self-sustaining.

Apparently, looking for a way out of the financial quagmire, the governor decided to concession the management of the parastatals and the hospitals in the state to private organ­isations.

According to Okorocha, “I can’t continue to give them subvention. ADP in the state collects close to N20 million every month producing nothing; the Imo State

Water Board gets more than N7 million every month, yet there is no pipe-borne water anywhere in Imo State. We cannot be wasting public resources on people who are not pro­ductive.”

But the organised labour in the state togeth­er with some communities whose communal clinics were affected has vowed to resist the concession plans of the governor.

.............


In Abia, the state government has set up a committee that will be in charge of paying workers’ salary arrears from the N14billion bailout fund it received from the Federal Gov­ernment.

This is even as workers in the state are wait­ing to see if the deadline of October 30, set by Governor Okezie Ikpeazu for the payment of salary arrears would be met.

Speaking in Umuahia, Governor Ikpeazu said the state had received about N14billion bailout fund, saying that the money would not be used for the payment of gratuities, but only salaries.

However, the governor gave the end of this month as the deadline for the payment of all salary arrears owed workers in the state.

Some categories of workers are owed as much as eight months while others are owed up to three years.

This has made life unbearable for the work­ers as some of them have resorted to doing odd jobs to make ends meet.

The state government no doubt is experienc­ing paucity of funds at this point in time which may have informed the idea of putting on hold road reconstruction works going on in some areas of Aba.

However, it is putting up measures to boast its internally generated revenue to compliment whatever comes from the Federal Govern­ment.

Niger State is probably one of the few states in the country whose workers have not experi­enced delay in the payment of salaries. From the days of Engineer Abdulkhadir Abdullahi Kure in 1999, through Dr. Muazu Babangida Aliyu to the present governor, Alhaji Abuba­kar Sani Bello, no administration in the state has failed to meet its obligation to workers as it affects payment of salaries.

This is not however to say that the prevail­ing economic crunch has not been biting very hard. As it is, the only project the new gov­ernment in the state has been able to carry out since assumption of office in May this year is the filling of potholes on major roads in the state. This project was tagged ‘operation zero potholes’

As a result of the economic challenges fac­ing the country, the administration of Alhaji Sani Bello has commenced the process of down-sizing its workforce. Head of the Civil Service in the state, Alhaji Maude in an inter­view said the 54 permanent secretaries inherit­ed by the administration from Aliyu has been pruned down to 25, pointing out that similar thing would also take place at the lower level of the service.

In Kogi State, the government is yet to re­ceive the N50.9billion bail- out fund from the Federal Government. The non-release of the fund from the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN has taken the dispute between the All Progres­sives Congress, APC and the Peoples Demo­cratic Party, PDP to the verge of conflict as the opposition party is being peddled as the brain behind the non-release.

The government accused the opposition party of writing no fewer than 10 petitions to the CBN on the need by the apex bank to withhold the money as the governorship elec­tion approaches. Government officials in Kogi State are charging the PDP of having told the CBN that if the money was released during this governorship election, it will be diverted by the PDP led government in the state.

The Deputy Governor, Yomi Awoniyi told Saturday Sun that the state government had met all the conditions that must be satisfied for the fund to be accessed but that the situ­ation remains the same. According to him, of the N50.9 billion requested as bail-out, over N45 billion would be used to pay the salaries of staff of the 21 local government areas and primary school teachers who are being owed between eight to 23 months salaries while the rest will be used to pay the state civil servants who are only owed one month salary.

However, he expressed hope that the bailout fund would be received next week adding that Kogi State is expected to receive the highest fund because the state’s indebtedness to com­mercial banks was the least among the states that applied for the bailout.

The deputy governor’s optimism notwith­standing, some conditions that must be met are likely to work against the non-release of the fund. Saturday Sun learnt that apart from the huge petitions written against the release of the fund, the state government is yet to submit a comprehensive biometric data and bank verifi­cation numbers of all the staff in the local
gov­ernment and teachers to be paid. It was learnt that the government only submitted the salary voucher of the staff which was not acceptable by the CBN as it was said to be heavily laden with the names of ghost workers.

On the plight of workers in the state, the NLC chairman, Comrade Onu Edoka said the situation is precarious and threatened that if the money was not released within one week from Wednesday, a mass protest will be organized and all roads leading to the state will be com­pletely blocked. Edoka also threatened that the workers would ensure that the governorship election slated for Nov 21st would be disrupt­ed if the money was not released.

Chairman of Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, Comrade Abdullahi Suleiman, said his members are the worst hit. He pleaded with President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene quickly before “things get out of hand”.

In Makurdi, the Benue State capital, Gover­nor Samuel Ortom, while giving his 100 days scorecard at a stakeholders meeting last Fri­day, disclosed that over N69 billion was being owed state and local government workers as salaries, pensions and gratuities at the time he took over the reins of power from his prede­cessor, Dr. Gabriel Suswam.

Government House officials stated that the immediate past administration owed workers of the state’s civil service five months salary before it handed over. But Ortom disagreed with the wage bill, noting that the current fig­ures at both levels seem bloated and therefore, unacceptable. He disclosed that verification exercises were ongoing at both the state and local government levels to ascertain the gen­uineness or otherwise of wage bills he put at close to N4 billion monthly in both cases.

He also revealed that the state only a few days before then received bailout funds for payment of salary arrears at both the local gov­ernment and state levels. “We accessed N15.5 billion for payment of teachers and local gov­ernment staff salary arrears and N12.5 for state government workers.” However, the Ortom’s administration had, before accessing the bail­out, borrowed funds in form of bonds to the tune of N15 billion for the purpose of paying workers’ salaries, take off of government and paying counterpart funds of development part­ners as well as execute other pressing govern­ment projects. That is aside the sum of N2.7 billion that was received from Liquified Nat­ural Gas (LNG) proceeds which was also said to have been used to offset part of the workers’ salary.

Ortom, however, lamented that these much-awaited funds may not be able to clear all salary arrears. According to him, both ar­rears of local and state government pensions and gratuities have not been covered by the funds.

Although the government is yet to make a clear cut pronouncement on whether or not it would engage in staff retrenchment as a way out of its financial quagmire, there are indications that the ongoing staff verification exercises are part of steps it has taken to in­directly reduce the work force. Government said the exercises were aimed at blocking fi­nancial leakages resulting from payment of ghost workers. But key government watchers are of the opinion that the manner in which the exercises are being carried out would automat­ically affect some persons who are not ghost workers.

From Ilorin, the governor of Kwara State has said that he will not retrench staff, but re­duce cost of governance through the blockage of revenue leakages. Kwara State, like other states in Nigeria is currently experiencing paucity of funds as a result of dwindling fed­eral allocation to the states and low internally generated revenue, IGR to service necessary government activities. This has impacted negatively on the workers as several salaries of civil servants were left on paid. The state is also owing various categories of workers’ salaries ranging from one to five months espe­cially those working in parastatals. As a result, the Non -Academic Staff Union (NASU) of Kwara State owned tertiary institutions em­barked on indefinite strike to press home their demand for their five months salary arrears. The Senior Special Assistant to Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed on media and publici­ty, Dr Muideen Akorede said in his reaction that”Governor Ahmed takes the welfare of all workers seriously and is concerned by the plight of the affected workers.”

The governor has proposed N10b loan from commercial banks to revive ongoing in­frastructural projects in the state which were stalled by lack of funds. Governor Ahmed noted that the N10b loan became imperative because the drop in allocations had made it impossible to continue ongoing projects and start new ones as the government could barely afford to pay workers’ salaries without assistance. Providing further details of the pro­posed facility, Ahmed added that it was a soft loan with affordable repayment terms which had been collateralized against the state gov­ernment’s share of the Excess Crude Account.

In Plateau State, the government has been categorical that workers employed at the twi­light of the former Governor Jonah Jang ad­ministration would be asked to go. The gov­ernment however said that those who have been in the employment of the state govern­ment and have been captured by the biomet­rics will not be retrenched, but that “all those who were smuggled in by the last administra­tion towards the tail end of its tenure would be asked to go”.

The incumbent governor met six months unpaid salary when he took over in May 2015. With the bailout, so far the state government has cleared the backlog of salaries and paid salaries up to July. The state government however owes its workers August and Sep­tember salaries. Having exhausted the bailout fund, the state Governor, Simon Lalong held a meeting with heads of ministries, depart­ments and agencies last Tuesday to explain the financial situation to them. During the meeting, the state’s Accountant General, Cyril Sanyir, explained that the financial situation of the state is a precarious one. He said having inherited only N96m as credit balance from the previous administration, the state monthly allocation from the federation account stood at a little above N2.1b in the last four months, leaving the state with a debt profile of about N1.2b.

He said if this is deducted from the alloca­tion from the federation account for servicing of loan, the state will be left with a little above N600m to run the state. To pay salaries of workers alone, he said, the state government requires N1.4b monthly.

The state chairman of NLC, Comrade Jibril Bancir confirmed that the workers are only be­ing owed salaries for two months and that the workers have been patient with the adminis­tration knowing the efforts it is making to pay the remaining balance.

Governor Simon Lalong’s administration has been able to service the N103b debt and reduced it to N93b. For the going project, es­pecially those inherited from the past govern­ment, the governor on Tuesday got approval from the state House of Assembly to access N10b loan from the excess crude fund. Most of the projects are on-going and not yet aban­doned.
PoliticsRe: Reasons Why The Yoruba’s And Hausa's Are Very Happy Being Nigerians by Flyoruboy(m): 8:19pm On Dec 06, 2015
VickJames:
grin grin grin grin

Now since you are bringing information from last year, which state this year did they queued to collect one plate of rice. which state in this country that some churches decided to give some cups of rice to survive?
Hypocrite, no be Obiano dey distribute Rice the other day? cheesy

Stomach Infrastructure? Anambra Governor Willie Obiano Distributes Rice to Civil Servants
http://abusidiqu.com/stomach-infrastructure-anambra-governor-willie-obiano-distributes-rice-civil-servants/

Jubilation As Governor Obiano Distributes One Bag Of Rice Each To Over 56,000 Civil Servants In Anambra state
http://www.odogwublog.com/2014/09/jubilation-as-governor-obiano.html

Obiano Starts 2018 governorship campaign with bags of rice
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/NIgerianWorldForum/conversations/messages/429128


You know the igbos in your different states are not there to beg but they are there to do business or sell something to someone, that means they are not jobless.
You sound like a very foolish guy, sorry to say. Na spirit go buy wetin those Igbos wey dey do 'business' for Yorubaland dey sell? No be pesin wey get money and purchasing power you Igbos dey sell to? Without us spending our too-much-money on those goods, your traders will be out of business in no-time. #FACT!

the igbos come to lagos which is a former capital and where all the monies from the different geopolitical zone contribute to make it what it is today.
Bullshyt. Igbos are in Lagos for the same reason they are in Kano, Ibadan, Jigawa, PH and everywhere else in Nigeria -- TO TRADE. Kapish!

people living in any south eastern states are better than the people living in osun at the moment.

we will see the new poverty rate for the 2015, i tell you, the southwest will not smile this year.
Another fantasy from a deranged Yee.boman. There are about 15,000 civil servants in Osun state and these are the only folks affected by the salary crises in a state of over 3-million. In other words, until Osun citizens start migrating to the East for economic survival, they're still better off than your economic migrants all over the SW.
PoliticsRe: Reasons Why The Yoruba’s And Hausa's Are Very Happy Being Nigerians by Flyoruboy(m): 8:02pm On Dec 06, 2015
VickJames:
http://247ureports.com/levels-of-poverty-in-nigeria/
Yinmu. Me sef get my own link for you: http://newsnownigeria.com.ng/ranking-of-nigerian-states-by-poverty-rates/ cheesy Anyone can pick and chose whichever favours them, abi na? cheesy

There it says:

REGIONAL AVERAGES
1 = South West - 19.3% Poverty (+ Average)
2 = South South - 25.2% Poverty (+ Average)
3 = South East - 27.36% Poverty (+ Average)

----------------------------------------------------------------------
** National Avg 46.0%% Poverty
----------------------------------------------------------------------

4 = North Central - 45.7% Poverty (+Average)
5 = North East - 76.8% Poverty (- Average)
6 = North West- 80.9% Poverty (- Average)


Leave matter for Mathias. We know the REAL poor economic migrants. cheesy They are still queuing up to catch the next Luxurious bus to the SW as we speak, while others are just disembarking at Ojota cheesy

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 (of 25 pages)