HIbreed's Posts
Nairaland Forum › HIbreed's Profile › HIbreed's Posts
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Story for the gods |
Olodo junior |
rickkychidex111:can you upgrade my.r class 2008 model? |
chrischina:do you upgrade r class 2008? |
You guys don't know what is happening in Aba |
Nonsense forum, owned by a coward dog! |
What a time to be alive |
Good deal for paystack. Strive obviously overpaid for a Nigerian startup with a meagree 60,000 customersp |
GAZZUZZ:alright. |
Gazzuzzlogistic:can you deliver to other states, or do you do waybill? |
Now i believe beyond every reasonable doubt that k2wise is a scammer. Tabbaz come and update your list to save some unsuspecting individuals from falling victim. |
This is heart-wrenching, anyway time will tell if k2wise is a scammer or its a case of rickety transaction. |
Mrscarter:you're wrong, every humans are different. |
chinchonglee:ok thanks |
chinchonglee:am the owner of the Dorm account but not the owner of the senders account. Prior to this time i had been doing UBA to UBA transacions. UBA doesn't do dorm to dorm transaction to other banks. |
chinchonglee:hello bro, can i do customer to customer transaction in UBA. I have 4,000$ i want to send to my dorm or should i desist the move. I don't want to get stuck. |
CBN better speak publicly on this. Am expecting funds soon don't know if i can still send it through my dorm account. I hate embarrasment. |
you"re looking for definition of death trap seek no more |
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Missyajoke:there is God, there is God it is always humans that are making the noise, why can't they allow this God to fight for himself. If every humans stops believing in all this Gods it dies a natural death! |
Remember Mubarak Bala, head of the Humanist Association of Nigeria, was seized by the police and has disappeared in custody. His arrest was announced on this thread https://www.nairaland.com/5823690/police-arrest-mubarak-bala-blasphemy Other Nigerian nonbelievers (whose numbers are on the rise) fear more detentions are coming. Amina Ahmed knew her atheist husband was taking enormous risks with some of his Facebook posts criticizing Christianity and Islam in Nigeria, a deeply religious country. She wanted him to be free to believe whatever he wanted. But she worried that if he kept up his commentary, the staunchly Muslim community he was born into would eventually retaliate. “You should just calm down,” she remembers telling him. “They don’t care. They can just kill you and nothing happens.” But her husband, Mubarak Bala, president of the Humanist Association of Nigeria, was not one to filter his words. On April 25, he logged on to Facebook again and typed a post calling the Prophet Muhammad a terrorist. Three days later he was arrested by the state police after being accused of violating anti-blasphemy laws, which can carry a death sentence. He has not been seen since. “We are concerned that he may be prosecuted under anti-blasphemy laws that provide for capital punishment in Nigeria,” wrote a group of United Nations experts who have called for his release. Mr. Bala, 36, was arrested after lawyers in private practice in his conservative birthplace, the Muslim-majority city of Kano, complained about his Prophet Muhammad post to the police. Other nonbelievers are worried that these same lawyers are drawing up a list of other Nigerian atheists to be prosecuted and that more arrests may be coming. The Nobel Prize-winning writer Wole Soyinka wrote that Mr. Bala’s arrest was part of a “plague of religious extremism” that has in recent decades encroached on the harmonious Nigeria he grew up in. While it was Mr. Bala’s post on Facebook that led to his arrest, the social media site was also the platform where he and Ms. Ahmed met. She messaged him there after reading that his deeply religious family had locked him up in a psychiatric hospital when he first came out to them as an atheist. She, too, was from a staunchly Muslim family, and she was curious. “I didn’t want to judge him,” she said in an interview. “I was just like — I want to hear his own side of the story.” Growing up in Kano, Nigeria’s second-biggest city and an ancient center of Islamic learning in the country, Mr. Bala was from a highly respected family, descended from generations of Islamic scholars. But as he got older, Mr. Bala came into contact with people outside Kano, and little by little he lost his faith. And as terror attacks increased in Nigeria, he became more vocal in his criticism. “What finally made me come out as atheist was a video of a beheading of a female Christian back in 2013 by boys around my age, speaking my language,” he wrote in an article about his personal journey that was published in 2016. “It hit me that the time for silence is over. Either someone speaks out or we all sink.” But even just speaking out to his close friends and family was dangerous. His father and elder brother thought he was sick, and got a doctor who believed that all atheists were mentally disturbed to admit him to a hospital. He was beaten, sedated and threatened with death if he tried to leave, he said. Mr. Bala has yet to be officially charged with any crime, according to Leo Igwe, the founder of the Humanist Association of Nigeria. And in violation of a June court ruling, he has not been allowed to see his lawyer. There have been repeated delays in the legal proceedings, partly caused by Covid-19 restrictions. Calls to the police in Kano seeking comment went unanswered. Mr. Bala is believed to be the first atheist arrested in Nigeria for blasphemy, but Muslims often fall afoul of the blasphemy laws in the Islamic legal system adopted 20 years ago by the country’s northern states. This month, Yahaya Sharif Aminu, 22, a singer in Kano was found guilty of blasphemy and sentenced to death for circulating a song he had composed, which critics said elevated a Senegalese imam above the Prophet Muhammad. He was arrested in March after protesters burned down his family home. There is also a blasphemy law under Nigeria’s nationwide customary legal system, which operates in parallel to Islamic and common law. Blasphemy under Islamic law can be punished by death — though such sentences are rarely carried out — while blasphemy under customary law carries a maximum sentence of two years. It is still unclear under which of these laws Mr. Bala might be charged. But if charged under either legal system, his could be a watershed case since atheists previously had not been prosecuted on blasphemy charges. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/25/world/africa/nigeria-blasphemy-atheist-islam.html
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IfGodbeforus:yes, what will save those who has not woken up from the slumber of religion. |
EVILFOREST: ![]() |
This guy is damn big! |
nissparts:do you still have this? Please forward to me at liketermites@gmail.Com |
Women are problems, i mean all women |
shortgun:the thing tire person. Abeg make Transferwise no reason us. |
I had account with this website since their days as HIFX before their affiliation/changing to XE. I submitted the four documents they requested which were pending approval since almost 2 months ago. Yesterday I received this message after speaking with XE customer care for ignoring my approval request for long, she accessed my account and said they will get back to me through e mail shortly. You can imagine my dissapointment when i received this message. Ps: Nigeria was one of their approved countries before.
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kestolove95:your sex drive is exactly that of my wife, you are lucky you got a compatible husband in that aspect. I only do once i na week, sometimes twice, i can't come and kill myself after working 15 hrs daily. |