Hardeybohwarley's Posts
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Hi Zaynie. The link you posted is not showing your comment to like but the main deal page. Do something about it or drop your handle. Thanks Salam |
diebuhari1:Guy you dey para ooo. |
I was going to Join the hunt, but I am not bounty hunter. So sad. |
Womenrep:I so much love Turn Up ft Phyno ![]() |
She is not beautiful please, not with those paint. |
When a concerned student contacted one of the school official he was told to pacify and encourage the payment. We are yet to be mobilised for service and the only thing they can do is this. Lalasticlala Mynd44 Seun
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It's trending on twitter now, how University of Ilorin has been trying to make her 34th Convocation ceremony a money making avenue from her Graduands. The convocation fee increased from 12500# to 20800#. Please join and help us on the trend #Unilorindaylightrobbery #Unilorinenoughisenough
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Hi ahnie, still keeping up to your diary like kilode. Blessings to you and yours. |
And I bin wan go pick Akwa-Ibom for my service. Na to change am na him sure pass now. Modified: Okay, thanks for all mention, my hope are high. |
Source: BBC. Mynd44, lalasticlala. |
Cordero learned the technique – folding paper into chains that are stitched together – in prison in Venezuela. There it was done with any discarded materials like magazines, sweet wrappers or food packaging. The banknote is a far superior material, he says: waterproof, smooth and strong. (Credit: Dylan Baddour) For Infante, the bolívar bags have been a blessing at a dark time. The novelty of apparel made from money and its link to current events means he can live relatively well while many Venezuelans scrape by selling candies or labouring. With just one sale a day, Infante can get by. Twice, people from Bogota have bought in bulk to resell in the Colombian capital. Americans and Italians have also loaded up on Infante’s bolívar bags to take home. Infante hopes his craft can get him out of the depressed border zone and into other big cities where he could make more money, like Bogota in Colombia or Lima in Peru. But his real hope, he says, is to someday return to a peaceful Venezuela.
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At the Venezuelan border, unofficial money changers sit watch over plastic tables heaped with bundled 20,000, 50,000 and 100,000 bolívar bills – the new sovereign bolívar hadn’t yet arrived to Cúcuta at the time of writing. Every day, thousands of Venezuelans return home from a day of work in Colombia, changing a handful of coins for a stack of bills on their way back. (Credit: Dylan Baddour) Older bills in lower denominations are treated like rubbish, like 10 bolívar banknotes printed in 2011, 100 bolívar banknotes printed in 2015 or 1,000 bolívar banknotes printed in 2016. The artists buy bills in bulk, paying $1 or more per sack of cash, more than the notes are actually worth. Here, Jorge Corderos sifts through his art supply, noting that he started out making bags from two and five bolívar bills. “We never imagined we would be using a 5,000 bill,” he says.
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The bags can include more than a thousand bills, worth just a handful of US cents. These creations sell for between $7 and $15 – enough money, Infante says, to feed a family for at least two weeks in Venezuela. Hyperinflation has evaporated the savings accounts and destroyed the wages of the Venezuelan people. Every day, tens of thousands of Venezuelans cross the border to Cúcuta, a city on Venezuela’s western border about 680km south west of Caracas. They cross to work, to buy food that’s scarce at home, or to migrate throughout South America.
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The collapse of Venezuela’s currency has wrecked its economy, driving millions of its people to hunger and extreme poverty. Artists like Edison Infante, 23, have turned the country’s worthless money into an asset, weaving banknotes into purses and bags. Like millions of others, they have left their country. Now they work in the Colombian border city of Cúcuta to support their families back home. Their art has attracted buyers from across Colombia – and the world – for its surreal symbolism of a failed economy.
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Also if you can afford to buy MTN subscription, dial *449*2# and get free 500mb. Thank me later. |
Omo the guy don use ref tire. |
Out of everything wey dey, na owl issue dey pepper Una abegiii. |
Make we see wetin go happen. Osun by the grace of God will be peaceful during and after the Election. |
So na Unilorin the guy even day. Rep us well o. |
Hi Tiffany07. I always believe one will be free when one is independent of others. And a step to be free is what you're going through right now. Once you're through and everything goes with your plan, you will have nobody to be monitoring and demanding unnecessary acts from you again. Sorry about your catarrh. Wishing you quick recovery. Can't wait to read those Arabian gist again. ![]() |
Lock and Loaded with my Voter's Card, no more AregbeRascal or his kind again. Ede la wa. Ede la De. Ade(mola)leke Gboyega Oyetola. Argue with your Vote.
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Lock and Loaded with my Voter's Card, no more AregbeRascal or his kind again. Ede la wa. Ede la De. Ade(mola)leke Gboyega Oyetola. Argue with your Vote.
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Richdad50:Omo you get time ooo |
NaijaTalkTown:Thanks boss, I actually had the same opinion. The lady is just seeking sympathy that won't be given. WizKid was even telling her to remember when she use to insult him and he will be telling her, it will stop one day. She was just been too attach for no reason. She definitely wants WizKid attention throughout the chat which was not given. Wizzy according to the chat is not always around but he does send whatever the lil boy needs. Let that lady go and rest jare. |
Primusinterpares:She is married Eshe. On a lighter note that looks yummy. |
Austema:Eko Atlantic |
Lexusgs430:You tried but she will tell us the details soon. |