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Greycells's Posts

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Jobs/VacanciesRe: Job Opening at a dredging company (apply if fluent in Hausa) by Greycells(op): 1:44pm On Jan 08, 2008
The pay is cool for d industry sector! Only peeps fluent in Hausa need apply!
Jobs/VacanciesJob Opening at a dredging company (apply if fluent in Hausa) by Greycells(op): 1:40pm On Jan 08, 2008
Job Opening at a Dredging Company

A newly incorporated Dredging Company with Office on Victoria Island desires to employ a dilligent OND holder as a cashier.

Candidate for this opening must be fluent in Hausa Language.

Internship experience is an added advantage.

Forward your curriculum vitae to treasureisland101@yahoo.com before January 11, 2008.
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Opening @ A Leading Chamber Of Commerce by Greycells(op): 11:16am On Jan 07, 2008
[quote author=G-reycells link=topic=102535.msg1801917#msg1801917 date=1198864829]The position will be filled in the first week of JANUARY.[/quote]@2bad

Did u read d initial post. angry

Cheeky u! tongue

The vacancy has been filled and lucky peerson started work on Friday. cheesy
TravelRe: Mind-boggling Nigerianphobia Tales in South Africa, Bellview Airlines intervenes by Greycells(op): 3:16pm On Jan 02, 2008
@dejia



I tot d story says Bellview Airlines is the convener, not the Nigerian High Commission in South Africa!
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Opening @ A Leading Chamber Of Commerce by Greycells(op): 3:05pm On Jan 02, 2008
the opening is now closed.

sorry, about to be filled grin
Jobs/VacanciesOpening @ A Leading Chamber Of Commerce by Greycells(op): 7:00pm On Dec 28, 2007
Graduates of Arts or Social Sciences with a flair for writing, proofreading and marketing should email their CV to

Females only please. 

The opening is with a leading chamber of commerce in the country. The position will be filled in the first week of JANUARY.
TravelRe: Mind-boggling Nigerianphobia Tales in South Africa, Bellview Airlines intervenes by Greycells(op): 9:12am On Dec 27, 2007
@Wany

your comments are a great disservice to Nigerians. I am sure u will soon tell us that Nigerians are to blame for apartheid in South Africa. Nigerians are not as criminal as South Africans.

your statistics about Nigerians and crime in South Africa is spurious and conjured from a deeply prejudiced mind.

Am sure u are South African angry
BusinessRe: What To Do With 500,000 Loan? by Greycells(m): 5:57pm On Dec 17, 2007
seems so grin
TravelRe: Mind-boggling Nigerianphobia Tales in South Africa, Bellview Airlines intervenes by Greycells(op): 4:00pm On Dec 12, 2007
@Davidlan

Must they vent it on Nigerians only? Considering the leading role Nigeria played in the emancipation of black South Africans from the shackles of slavery.
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Insight Communications Has Started Calling by Greycells(m): 5:39pm On Dec 05, 2007
@equilibrum
sorry dude, entry level is said to be 960k (for a 9:00am to 5:00pm job) plus lots of benefit. Insight sure pays more than First Bank and what most banks pay contract staff.

So, give me second base,  abegi!

Why in d world will u advise anybody not to come to Lagos for d test,  abi u dey write d test and u wan de-populate the venue?

Insight especially boasts of a world-class working environment,

Need I say more?

Give me another base joo!
TravelRe: Pictures Of The Week (Ugly Side Of Lagos) by Greycells(m): 5:23pm On Dec 05, 2007
Hmmmh! cry cry cry cry for brand nigeria cry cry cry
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Insight Communication by Greycells(m): 1:33pm On Dec 05, 2007
@iykefred

u have not even written d test

anyway, it does not come anyway near what obtains in the banking industry.

Expect a take 5-digit monthly take home, meaning dt ur expected annual income is a 6-digit sum
Jobs/VacanciesRe: 2007 Insight Communications Aptitude Test Holds Dec 9th 2007 by Greycells(m): 12:02pm On Dec 05, 2007
30 questions; first 17 will be english and the rest mathematics , be prepred for probability and statistical sums.
all this in 25mins so gear up.

heard dt d computer shuts u out, once your time is off.


All d best
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Insight Communication by Greycells(m): 12:00pm On Dec 05, 2007
30 questions; first 17 will be english and the rest mathematics , be prepred for probability and statistical sums.
all this in 25mins so gear up.

heard dt d computer shuts u out, once your time is off.


Some peeps dt dunnit last year said so.

Browse Nairaland for details, people travelled this same road last year.

All d best
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Anybody With Info On Insight Communications In Lagos? by Greycells(m): 11:42am On Dec 05, 2007
30 questions; first 17 will be english and the rest mathematics , be prepred for probability and statistical sums.
all this in 25mins so gear up.

heard dt d computer shuts u out, once your time is off.

Some peeps dt dunnit last year said so.

Browse Nairaland for details, people travelled this same road last year.

All d best
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Insight Communications Has Started Calling by Greycells(m): 11:33am On Dec 05, 2007
Insight Grey is the number one advertising agency in Nigeria, accounting for over 60% of d advertising industry billing in Nigeria.

The first agency to hit the billion naira billing mark, years back when the capital base of banks was mere 2 billion.

Need I say more
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Insight Communication by Greycells(m): 11:25am On Dec 05, 2007
@Ebubepaul

Insight Grey is the number one advertising agency in Nigeria, accounting for over 60% of d advertising industry billing in Nigeria. They work on advertising concepts of companies that include Bank PHB, Nigeria Breweries, MTN (Campus blast) etc.

30 questions; first 17 will be english and the rest mathematics , be prepred for probability and statistical sums.
all this in 25mins so gear up.

heard dt d computer shuts u out, once your time is off.

Their tests are always done in batches because they want to avoid overcrowding,  I know peeps dt are billed for Dec 15th, 2007 and at 6pm in the evening too.

Would you rather contend with 5, 000 other applicants for less than 15 vacant management trainee position in a rowdy primary school complex, in the hot sun, on a saturday from 8:00am till 5:00pm in the evening.

Give it to Insight please, they are a considerate organization.

Good luck
TravelMind-boggling Nigerianphobia Tales in South Africa, Bellview Airlines intervenes by Greycells(op): 11:15am On Dec 05, 2007
Mind-boggling tales on Nigerianphobia in South Africa

Written by Kenneth Ehigiator
Tuesday, 04 December 2007


If you ask any Nigerian resident in any part of South Africa the major challenge he faces living in the country, his sure response is insipid hatred from the citizens of the country, white, coloured or black. Of course, that of the blacks is mostly noticeable because they are in majority in terms of population. The position of ordinary Nigerians on the streets of South Africa is not different from that of the Nigerian Consulate or High Commission in the country.

 
The inhibitions Nigerians are faced with as a result of the phobia South Africans have for them recently propelled Bellview Airlines to organise in Johannesburg a forum for South Africa-based Nigerian journalists, their South African counterparts and officials of Nigeria’s Consulate in that country, led by the Consul-General, Ambassador Sani Muhammad.

Convener of the parley and Bellview Airlines’ Country Manager in South Africa, Mrs. Kemi Ilori, said the forum had become necessary because the phobia of South Africans for Nigerians was preventing Nigerians involved in genuine businesses there from actualising their dreams.

She told the gathering that South African journalists were particularly invited to be part of the discussions because the South Africa media had been a veritable tool for perpetration of the hatred against Nigerians.

Revelations at the forum revealed that editors in South African media have made up their minds what to play up about Nigeria, to the extent that if it is not negative, it is not newsworthy. Tales were told by some South African journalists of how editors throw away scripts on the positive exploits of Nigerians resident in the country.

For instance, Nigerian journalists resident in South Africa lamented that not even a mention was made in the South African media of the Golden Eaglets’s victory in the just concluded FIFA Under-17 World Cup in South Korea.

Mention was also made of a Nigerian surgeon who led a team of physicians to perform the first separation of co-joined twins in South Africa. Vanguard learnt that while the names of the South African members of the team were celebrated in the media, mention was not made of the Nigerian that led the team.

Furthermore, a Nigerian scientist who recently invented a machine for eye operation was reportedly honoured by the South African government for the feat, but unfortunately, the feat was unreported in the South Africa media.

On the issue of crime and drug, Nigeria’s Consul-General in Johannesburg, Ambassador Sani Muhammad, regretted that South Africans and even their security agencies have labelled all Nigerians criminals and drug peddlers, though that is not the case.

According to him, recent statistics released by an agency of the South African government showed that 97% of the crimes committed in South Africa were perpetrated by South Africans themselves, while only a tiny fraction of the remaining 3% involved Nigerians.

Muhammad said several of the criminals who are mainly from Malawi, Zimbabwe and other Southern African countries immediately claim Nigeria whenever they are arrested, adding that they reveal their true nationalities only at the point of deportation.

The ambassador also told the gathering that the Consulate was currently pursuing the prosecution of a South African policeman who wilfully killed a Nigeria without any provocation or committal of offence. He charged South African journalists who were present at the forum thus: "The main issue is one of image. We, at the Consulate, are addressing them and we will continue to address them. I want to appeal to South African journalists who have visited Nigeria to tell the truth about the country."

The Consul, Nigerian Community Relations at the Consulate, Mr Chris Iroala, was not different in his submission. He attributed inferiority complex on the part of black South Africans for their aggression against Nigerians.

According to Iroala, black South Africans are aghast that Nigerians could stand and look at the whites in the face, and thus see them as people who have come to their country to dominate them. "We are really proud people who know what we want and how to go about it.

The immigration officers here go from house to house seeking Nigerians for repatriation, even those with genuine business, without notifying the Consulate. It is not the duty of immigration to tell who is the Nigerian, but that of the Consulate.

We have protested it and we are discussing with the authorities here on the matter, and the discussions have been fruitful," he said.

News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Bureau Chief in Central and Southern Africa, Mr. Kevin Osazuwa, confirmed the Consul-General’s disclosure that the South African High Commission in Lagos issues visas to Nigerians without means of survival in the country at the expense of those with genuine businesses to do there, just for the sake of collecting non-refundable repatriation fees, stressing that even though he had genuine intentions of coming to South Africa to represent his organisation, the high commission still slammed a repatriation fee of N83,000 on him and has refused to refund the money back to him about five months after.

Osazuwa said several South Africa-based Nigerians were doing well in the country, but was quick to add that their exploits, though celebrated by the South African government, are played down by the media.

He also told a story of how a Nigerian who emerged best law graduate in the whole of South Africa two years ago was denied the opportunity of attending the South African equivalent of Nigeria Law School simply because she is a Nigerian.

Head, Southern African Bureau of the Voice of Nigeria (VON), Mr. Tony Ekata, shared a similar thought on the matter, saying South Africans have labelled all Nigerians resident in their country criminals, irrespective of professional and social status.

He said more than 90% of crime committed in South Africa were by South Africans themselves, with people from other Southern African countries as Malawi, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, etc, dominating the remaining figure of not more than 3%.

He said South Africans’ hatred for Nigerians was deep-seated, wondering why this is so, considering the role played by Nigeria and Nigerians to liberate the blacks from the shackles of apartheid.

Alternate chairman of Nigerian Union in South Africa, Mr. Debo Sodeke, blamed the local people’s attitude towards Nigerians on ignorance and lack of exposure.

He said the long years of suppression the blacks were put through during the apartheid era has affected their psyche, to the extent that they have been brain-washed to see fellow blacks, especially Nigerians, as people who have come to take opportunities away from them.

Sodeke, however, said his union was working hard to change the perceived bad image of Nigeria in the country. Another Nigerian journalists based in South Africa, Segun Dipe, noted that there was an improvement in the relationships between black South Africans and the Nigerian community at the moment, adding that the situation was really bad for Nigerians within the first few years after the collapse of apartheid.

According to him, the hatred for Nigerians that subsists is foisted and promoted by the whites who control the economy, police force and the media. "Because the whites control the economy and those other institutions, they use them to rule the minds of the blacks to see other blacks as enemies," Dipe said.

He said Nigerian journalists in South Africa would continue to interface with the media in the country to change the perception they have of Nigeria and her people. Dipe equally suggested that Nigerian media organisations set up offices in South Africa to counter the negative reporting of the country by the South African media.

However, mention was immediately made of efforts made by ThisDay Newspapers and Daar Communications to set up in South Africa and how they were frustrated out by the South African authorities.

Other Nigerian journalists who spoke at the forum never stop highlighting the sacrifices Nigeria and her people made to liberate South Africa from apartheid; how Nigeria became a frontline state in the struggle against apartheid, even though she was located thousands of kilometers away.

A South African journalist, Gugu Sibiya, who spoke on behalf of other South African journalists at the forum, said after listening to stories of roles played by the Nigerian government and Nigerians to liberate blacks from white man’s domination in apartheid South Africa, that there was need for Nigeria to blow her trumpet over this.

According to her, not too many black South Africans of this generation are aware of the sacrifices made by Nigerians to give them freedom. Sibiya said much of the negative perception South Africans have of Nigeria was perpetrated by the media controlled by the whites.

She said editors in South African media organisations already have a mindset about Nigeria, that of a country where nothing good can come from. Sibiya said each time she submitted stories on positive things being done by Nigerians in South Africa, she was accused by her editors of either having an affair with a Nigerian and, therefore, duty bound to defend his country, or that she was paid to do so. She said South African newspapers use negative stories about Nigeria to sell their papers.

"The only stories they want to hear about Nigeria is that of crime, drug and such stories are played up boldly on front pages to sell the papers," said Sibiya, who said her frequent visit to Nigeria had since changed her perception of the country and its people.

Sibiya, who claimed to be a close friend of the Anyiam-Osigwes, stressed the need for such editors to be taken on trips to Nigeria. "Perhaps that may change their perception," she added.

Sibiya said her years of interactions with Nigerians have shown that they are very warm, hardworking and upwardly mobile people that South Africans could tap so much from, if all suspicions in the way of the relationships between them were removed.

She also said the previous dispensations at the Consulate or High Commission have not been forthcoming about participating in events that could educate South Africans about Nigeria and her people, but gave kudos to the current Consul-General for his efforts at engendering this.

Bellview Airlines’ Public Affairs Head, Mr. Habib Muhammad, said the time has come for black South Africans to take their destinies in their own hands, adding that Nigerians could help them to actualise this, if they interfaced with them.

According to him, apartheid may have been defeated in South Africa, but black South Africans are not yet free. Muhammad noted that with the way the South African economy is currently structured, blacks may not rise beyond certain level in realising their dreams, wondering why they are not working with Nigerians to improve their lots.

The Bellview spokesman said if white South Africans could come to Nigeria to make so much money, the blacks were better placed to make more if they eliminate their hatred against Nigerians and work with them because, according to him, Nigeria is a land of opportunities.

"The average Nigerian could look at the whiteman in the face, but the blacks cannot. I sincerely think the blacks can tap into this courage of Nigerians to empower themselves," he said.

One important message guests took away was the need for the Nigerian government to make noise about the role it played in the struggle against apartheid, as this, according to the people who spoke at the forum, will go a long way in reshaping the attitudes of South Africans towards the country and Nigerians, especially those resident there.

In this regard, the High Commission in South Africa was asked to be more proactive in championing the enlightenment of South Africans about the virtues, culture and exploits of Nigeria in the international community, especially with regards to her peace-keeping roles in Africa and beyond.


Story source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2531&Itemid=49
PropertiesRe: Accommodation Problem by Greycells(m): 2:52pm On Nov 30, 2007
All u presently need is a place to lay ur head

And probably something close to ur office (to minimise transport cost). So why not try Ebutte-Metta / Somolu,

Please opt for a cheaper accomodation, I know peeps that are paying dt 180k for 2 bedroom flat in neighbourhoods like Mile 2, Ogba etc, (which makes 180k a high price for self contained),

Please try to cut ur coat according to ur size,

I wish u well
CareerRe: Young And Upcoming Professionals, Lets Meet Here by Greycells(m): 4:28pm On Nov 22, 2007
corporate communications specialist
Jobs/VacanciesRe: (job Offer )i Need Your Advice by Greycells(m): 5:32pm On Nov 21, 2007
congratulations, all u need is a SWOT (Strenght, Weakness, Opprtunities, Threats) Analysis for each job offer, After that, making a choice becomes an easy kill
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Bellveiws' Test Format. by Greycells(m): 5:18pm On Nov 21, 2007
Expect English comprehension,simple and compound interest, word problem, a little of logic, simple arithmetic, And the timing, u will be given 45 minutes,

Anyway, the pass-mark is 50, but peeps that score below dt are usually also called for interviews incase they got real fire in them, But in most cases, guys that score 70, 75, 80 etc. often get the job,

Hope d test format for engineers is d same one used across board, If it is d same, expect the above listed stuff,

Wish u d best
Music/RadioRe: Who Is The Next Pride Of Kennis Music? by Greycells(m): 1:38pm On Nov 19, 2007
@PrinceT

Talking about Sound Sultan,  his stuff is not very very commercial.

Sultan is a bundle of talent that would thrive under a management that is capable of promoting art music.. Kennis promotes commercial music.

Sultan's crowd are the Jazzhole, Didi Museum, Goethe, British Council, French Cultural Centre ot Terra Kulture type. He is not a mass-market artiste.

But u will agree wit me that he is far far better-off than he was while with Nelson Brown's Dove Media.
Jobs/VacanciesRe: ''Job Seekers'' Be Careful Attending Interviews by Greycells(m): 4:04pm On Nov 16, 2007
@Seun

Being careful is not useless, Not at all.

It may mean certifying dt u are attending a real job interview before setting out etc,
Music/RadioRe: Who Is The Next Pride Of Kennis Music? by Greycells(m): 3:33pm On Nov 16, 2007
Kennis ain't ripping anybody off,  Ask Nomoreloss, OJB, C-mion and others, they will tell you that Kennis Music is d place to get your due (or take your career to d next level) as a musician in terms of local, regional, continental and intercontinental hype. Showbiz is all about hype,

Kennis posses great business savvy that ,  Luciano (fine boy owner of Question Mark), Predy Wise, Storm Records (owned by Obi Asika), Sound Factory (d label dt went under after releasing Omotola Jalade's debut aiblum), West End (hope d name is right), Ivory Music (old school record label), Premiere Music (old school record label), all lack,

Point to the superstars made by all these preppy record labels in the last 10 years of music in Nigeria, 

Kennis has to its credit the likes of ,

Paul Play Dairo (now has his own label)
Eedris
Tony Tetuila
Tuface Idibia

If other labels are able to make a commercial success of their artistes like Kennis Music, then the music industry would have developed far beyond what we have today,

Even as i do not like the Kennis Music style,  It works and I am sure of what I am saying,  Tu Face's manager, Joice knows so,

In spite of the hype that accompanied the debut of Obi Asika led Storm Music,  the label is yet to take the careers of Dare Art ALade, Sahasa, Gt d Guitar Man and Jazzman Olofin to the next level,

Yes, Kennis' primetime entertainment may be messed, their music marketing savvy is almost unparalleled in Nigeria and West Africa's music industry, 

Remember, they single-handedly made music CD piracy less attractive by crashing the price of CDs some years back,

Kennis dey rip artistes off abi? Ask Tu Face about d Lincoln Navigator wey Bros pass on to him, ask him about d N20 million naira Guiness deal; ask him about d MTV Base deal,  and so on and so forth,  abeg another story


I hate Kennis, I love Kennis, I hate Kennis, I love Kennis,
EventsRe: Birthday Date Meanings by Greycells(m): 3:03pm On Nov 16, 2007
very very cheesy cheesy cheesy
Dating And Meet-up ZoneRe: If You Were Born In May Post In,post In: by Greycells(m): 4:51pm On Nov 15, 2007
@aysomething

Hurray, good to know u are my birthday mate,

Also May 28
RomanceRe: Are Guys Jealous Lovers Than The Girls by Greycells(m): 4:48pm On Nov 15, 2007
No fast and hard rules,

I have girlfirends that have no ounce jealousy in them. their man can kiss another girl in their presence for all they care,

And i also know of boys with same attitude,

So jealousy things is balanced between the sexes, No gender has monopoly,
Music/RadioRe: Who Is The Next Pride Of Kennis Music? by Greycells(m): 4:44pm On Nov 15, 2007
Kennis music is losing its grip on the showbiz scene, d company needs to re-invent itself if it is to shine brightly post-Tuface
CareerRe: Couples Working As Employees In The Same Company? by Greycells(m): 4:39pm On Nov 15, 2007
someone told me it obtains in multinationals like SPDC, and some very good companies,

However, the caveat is, you cannot be the direct supervisor or boss of your wife, husband, brother, sister or relative,
Jobs/VacanciesRe: ''Job Seekers'' Be Careful Attending Interviews by Greycells(m): 4:32pm On Nov 15, 2007
My collegeau in the office just confirmed that people lure job seeekers for money ritual purposes,

He said it is not peculiar to Eastern Nigeria, E dey happen for Lagos, Lagos Island to be precise,

Let us all becareful for nothing
Jobs/VacanciesRe: ''Job Seekers'' Be Careful Attending Interviews by Greycells(m): 4:30pm On Nov 15, 2007
Looks suspect all through,

Maybe I may be tempted to give d dubious IV a chance if I am also desperatly loooking for a job,

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