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RomanceRe: Nigerian Ladies Talk About How Their Wedding Night Sex Will Look Like by INTROVERT(f): 8:51am On Jun 26, 2017
Papiikush grin
CrimeRe: Lady Crises Out After Police Arrest Her 10yr & 8yr Kids In Port Harcourt(pics) by INTROVERT(f): 6:47pm On Jun 22, 2017
She's having family issues with the husband or his family who have longer legs... .. Before next week we shall hear the other side of the story......
PoliticsRe: Court Refuses To Dismiss $1.6bn Fraud Charges Against Omokore, Others by INTROVERT(f): 2:31pm On Jun 22, 2017
Seen
CelebritiesRe: Oladunni Churchill 'reacts To Leaked Chat' Between His Mum And Tonto Dikeh by INTROVERT(f): 2:31pm On Jun 22, 2017
Seen
PoliticsRe: 2019 And The Legend Of President Buhari- Can He Run Again? by INTROVERT(op): 2:28pm On Jun 22, 2017
Mynd44 Lalasticlala
Politics2019 And The Legend Of President Buhari- Can He Run Again? by INTROVERT(op): 2:27pm On Jun 22, 2017
Considering President Muhammadu Buhari’s struggle an unremitting debilitating disease which has kept him out of his office and country indefinitely, should the 74-year -old be on the ballot in 2019?

In an ideal world, this is a non-question. The proposition carries the unmistakable undertones of callousness and mischief. For the obvious reason that President Buhari has been in a protracted state of incapacitation, it is inhuman to speculate in his electability as if he were some blue chip stock.

A certain ‘supporter’ of the president, however, responded as if the question was about a larger-than-life cult figure in a banana republic. Yes, Buhari must run for a second term. The North wants him to run ‘’even on the wheelchair.’’

The doctrinaire Buharist borrowed his response from Mrs. Grace Mugabe. Asked whether her nonagenarian husband would seek to extend his 30-year-old rule over the-food-basket-of-Africa-turned-basket-case-of-the-continent in the next presidential election, the first lady of Zimbabwe replied that her husband, Robert Mugabe, would run by all means, even if he was wheelchair-bound. (The vixen would later venture to promise that if he happened to die before the elections, he would be fielded as a ghost candidate!)

Now, it must be noted that ableism is absolutely unjustifiable. It violates the basic decencies of a civilized society. Physical disability does not diminish a man’s personhood and the physically challenged among us are entitled to the same rights, respect and opportunities enjoyed by all law-abiding members of society.

But Buhari’s re-election candidacy should be out of the question. And this has nothing to do with ableism. It has everything to do with his readiness and fitness to execute the office. So far, the unnamed ailment he suffers from has overwhelmed him to the point of being his preoccupation. The survivalist quest for recovery has rendered him unavailable to lead. Therefore, it goes without saying that he cannot be re-elected to carry on as a foreign-based, absentee president.


It is within the realm of possibility that Buhari can make a stunning health comeback. But he is no spring chicken. The reality of his age and the seriousness of his condition mean that the odds are stacked against him.

With the best medical treatment in the world and the blank check of a compassionate leave, he is still unable to bounce back in quick time. This fact suggests that his recovery is in the lap of the gods and that it is safe to regard him as a will-o’-the-wisp.

Wisdom acknowledges a present truth and constructively adapts to it. The truth of the moment, which only an ostrich’s playmate can miss, is that Buhari cannot be trusted to provide leadership at the highest level in Nigeria. Wisdom whispers that it is foolishness to plan the future around a sick, aging man with an uncertain prospect of recovery.

Let’s face it: Buhari has had his day. At the best of times, he was unable to stamp his interpretation on the role of the president. He dissipated his head of steam on hesitancy and squandered the goodwill he needed to push his agenda. With the best of will in the world, he cannot make a more effective leader out of himself now or in the future.

His sickness has tremendously weakened him as the head of the government of Nigeria and as a person. His ill-health has created the dynamic of codependency between him and his inner circle. He uses them as fig leaf for his privacy and they exploit their proximity to him to prosper as the dead hand of a privileged cabal.

In his absence, ‘Acting President’ Yemi Osinbajo has found himself working to earn brownie points for loyalty. Osinbajo flinches from taking assertive steps. He acts timid to stave off charges of ambition, instead opting to play the underling who 'regrets' having to hold down the fort.

He would travel to Katsina and introduce himself to the president’s kinsmen as Buhari’s son. He would not sign the budget until the cabal in London teleggraphed permission in the name of the boss. He cannot inaugurate newly confirmed ministers. He cannot deal with the rampaging headhunters. He cannot move against the demented Northern youths threatening to destroy 44 trillion naira Igbo investment in the North. He cannot go beyond the brief to ‘coordinate the affairs of the nation.’

The absent president/acting president arrangement is an awkward and inconvenient theatre. It offshored power and left a well behaved figure head to maintain semblance of constitutional order. The entire administration has, however, shrunk to Osibanjo trying to impress with his loyalty to his principal. Aisha returned from London the other day to thank him for dimming his light while the master was away!

This state of affairs is not what the presidency is for. Sadly, it is most likely to persist in a second Buhari term. President Buhari has to admit that he has had his day. If he manages to weather this tenure, he should be grateful enough to retire. He needs to relieve his frame of the crushing burden of the presidency and to release the nation to progress beyond his infirmity. He needs to experience as much of the lightness of insouciance as the earth can allow.

Buhari needs to head home, whether he winds up on ‘Mugabe’s wheelchair’ or walks on his two legs before 2019. He should not contest in the 2019 elections. He lacks what it takes to run a viable presidential campaign, and more importantly, what it takes to run a country.

Subjecting himself to another campaign is a high risk bet. The rigors of another campaign will exhaust him, drain him and put his very fragile health at the mercy of chance.

I recognize that the shrine of power is never empty of sycophants. Every head of state we have had had an (un)critical mass of flatterers that took on the mission of spreading the gospel that the man of the moment was the only citizen competent to rule Nigeria. Abacha’s people said it of him. Obasanjo’s people said it of him. Jonathan’s people said it of him. And Buhari’s people are saying it of him.

The chairman of All Progressive Congress, John Odigie Oyegun, says the presidential ticket of the party is already spoken for. Buhari will have an automatic ticket. There will be no contest for presidential candidacy.

The president’s spokesman boasts that Buhari’s second term is a foregone conclusion. He has won in advance. He is invincible.

All of this sounds familiar. It is the sort of prideful thinking and arrogant talk that prefaced Jonathan’s doom. Buhari will experience a similar ruin if he permits himself to be suckered into buying the lie of his own invincibility.

He might be well thought of in the North. But the South is not as enamored of him. The wider electorate will not embrace him again without demur.

Buhari’s supporters often wheel out the degradation of Boko Haram and the fight against corruption as his notable achievements that qualify him for re-election. But whatever reduction in bloodshed that was achieved by the diminishing of the capacity of the terrorists to kill and hold territory in the North is being overcompensated for by the bloodsport of the ‘Fulani herdsmen’ in other parts of Nigeria. He has declined to apply state force against them because blood is thicker than water.

His fight against corruption has been discredited by the corruption of his closest aides and his hypocritical intervention as their human shield. He ‘cleared’ Tukur Buratai when the Dubai properties of the modest-salaried Chief of Army Staff were exposed. Buhari also wrote to clear Babachir Lawal after the SGF’s grass-cutting scam blew open. The enlightened demographic notes the double standard of in lavishing deodorant on your corrupt friends and spraying pesticide on your corrupt foes.

The economic recession, caused by a combination of the legacy of greed of the Jonathan administration and the chaotic mismanagement of the fundamentals of the economy by the Buhari administration, has caused countleless job losses, spiked hunger and spread misery all over Nigeria. Many Nigerians are worse off today than they were before he took office. And their next vote will reflect their discontent.

The 2019 elections will be a referendum on Buhari and the ‘Change’ mantra of the APC. He is almost certain to lose if he stands. Any Trumpian character that taps into the anger in the land will defeat him.

The idea that the worst of Buhari is better than the best of anyone else is ridiculous. This country of 175 million people has a sprinkling of younger, visionary individuals who can do governance infinitely better than Buhari. Nigeria is not so poor in humanity that only a frail Buhari is qualified to be president.

The last thing Nigeria needs is a president that cannot function. We need an energetic president. A virile president with smart ideas.

And the North needs that kind of president even more. The North is the backwater of Nigeria and seems fated to remain so for the foreseeable future. All that Northerners have benefited from the long rule of their ‘brothers’ is the vicarious feeling of being in power, worsening poverty and burgeoning out-of-school-kids population.

The North may want ‘Buhari on the wheelchair’. But they need a strong president. They need a stronger president more than the other half of the country.
http://saharareporters.com/2017/06/21/2019-and-legend-buhari-wheelchair-emmanuel-ugwu
Jokes EtcRe: Real Definition Of 'disgrace Of A Lifetime' by INTROVERT(f): 8:17am On Jun 22, 2017
Da F shocked shocked shocked
PoliticsRe: Why Are Igbo Leaders Silent While Nnamdi Kanu Breaks His Bail Conditions? by INTROVERT(f): 8:09am On Jun 22, 2017
grin They don't give a fucch grin
BusinessRe: Etisalat Has Paid Over 50% Of Original Loan – Investigation by INTROVERT(f): 8:01am On Jun 22, 2017
grin
CrimeRe: Politician, Bode Adeosun's Daughter Kidnapped Four Days To Birthday (photo) by INTROVERT(f): 6:44am On Jun 22, 2017
Sad.... I pray she will return unharmed. Where is Abba kyari?
TravelRe: Woman Kills 3 Children After Her Car Failed Brake In Abia State. Graphic Photos by INTROVERT(f): 4:30pm On Jun 19, 2017
shocked
CrimeRe: Evans Now An English Word Meaning Kidnap ..?? Lol... by INTROVERT(f): 4:27pm On Jun 19, 2017
grin
RomanceRe: Photos: Man Allegedly Flees After Beating His Wife And Daughters In Lagos by INTROVERT(f): 4:26pm On Jun 19, 2017
[center][/center]
CrimeRe: Man Beats His Wife And Daughters In Lagos, Flees (Photos) by INTROVERT(f): 4:25pm On Jun 19, 2017
[right][/right]
PoliticsRe: Eviction Notice: Hold Fulani Accountable For Whatever Happens – IPOB Elders by INTROVERT(f): 4:21pm On Jun 19, 2017
[center][/center]
CrimeRe: I Killed My Lover-landlady Because She Was Angry I Married (photo) by INTROVERT(f): 4:23pm On Jun 17, 2017
Aluu
Nairaland GeneralRe: Snake In The Hole. by INTROVERT(op): 4:20pm On Jun 17, 2017
More

Nairaland GeneralSnake In The Hole. by INTROVERT(op): 4:19pm On Jun 17, 2017
I came across these pics and wanna share with you guys. We live in a country where light is epileptic and we pour washing water down the water closet and it ends up foaming so be careful where you put your 'bum bum' or else something slimy scaly and slippery might kiss it. grin grin


Happy weekend.

PoliticsBiafra Will Be Land Locked And Over Populated. by INTROVERT(op): 8:45am On Jun 17, 2017
Landlocked South vs Deadlocked North
Who actually has the padlock?? Who has the keys??
By Bishops Edwin

This Hausa man took a deep cut of his gworo and said to me, "Biafra will be landlocked, over populated, they will loose so much wealth and the separation will most likely be a war"..

I sipped my wine, because I knew he was on the cheapest fears and I said to him,"I have all the keys to those pad locks"..

First look at these..Two scenarios..
A Biafra with the south south and another without the south south.
Without the South South... How has landlock stopped a nation from growing? In this era of Antonov An-225 Hercules planes that can lift over 450000kg equivalent to almost 2 ships and who remembers a SEAPORT in this generation of INTERNET-PORT when 85% of world's transactions are done through high speed broad band Internet. Gambia, Togo, Benin, Mauritania, Guinea etc all have unlimited assess to the sea.. Ha ji ya mee gini?? Are they in anyway doing better than Rwanda, Bostwana and little Djibouti. In fact Djibouti is servicing 25 African countries with its Antonov plane nicknamed SKY-PORT that covers its most distant point in Africa from Djibouti in 18hrs while it will take 3 days to move a 40ft container from Apapa to Aba.. Rwanda without a StreamPort nor RiverPort, not to talk of seaport is Africa's best growing economy!

In Europe, the PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain) have a peninsulaic access to the sea, whenever the storm of recession comes, it first sweeps them into the same damn sea, they are Eurozone weakest nations while landlocked countries like Luxembourg, Austria and Germany are waxing strong.. As in ha kwu chim n'ala...
In Asia, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Dubai are not only landlocked but desert locked and how has that affected them?.. Who sea epp??
If the SS is not Biafra, there are various international corridors and laws that can sort things out, not forgetting that a greater communication with that region must cross through the South east (Biafra)..
But if the Yoruba republics are declared and the complete anticipated Biafra is pronounced with the SS.. Then the north is simply DEADLOCKED and then mallam, I will advice you to chew less of this gworo now, so you can have what to eat then...

On the population, what laws says all Biafrans must live in Biafra land.. What percentage even lives in the north?? Less than 3%!!!.. Yes..
when you go to some places in the south east, the population looks like there is a festivity going on but you must admit that the Greater Tokyo Metropolitan has a population of 37million people and Monaco has a density of 22500 per sq. km.. I don't see people walking on the heads of others there, rather I see a China, India, Japan, USA, Mexico that has harnessed and muscled the strengths of their population into development.. Even Lagos explosively developed due to population increase, that people had to push back the sea.. 1000 skyscrapers in Biafra land, in no joke will solve the housing problem of Biafra by 95%!.. Take this to the bank!
.
On Biafrans loosing their wealth, I need not go outside Nigeria for an answer.. In 1970, Biafrans got £20 and in 1975, there were millionaires already in Biafra land, the likes of Chisco, Ekene Dili Chukwu, Emeka Offor and even in 1979, Alex Ekwueme single handedly sponsored NPN to presidency that he was rewarded with a VP seat... Now show me one man, east, south, north and west that is wealthy from all the inheritance of the abandoned property??
The north is still underdeveloped, impoverished and incomparably out of tone with the 21st century...

On separations meaning a war.. This defines the sum of the accumulation of the northern cowardice, as if Russia broke up through a war, what about Eritrea? Singapore and Malaysia??.. There are more peaceful resolutions to conflicts than the vampire attitudes of the north but let it be clear to you mallam, eshi à muru dike na mba, ka à muru ibe ya!..
.
The problem of the North is that they are brainlocked, spirituallocked, psycholocked, greedlocked, futurelocked, even landlocked and above all DEADLOCKED by their ancestors who have long lost the keys to UNLOCK them and yet they want everyone to synchronize with their backwardness and then still think its about PDP vs APC.


Don't ask me for source
grin
CrimeRe: 2 Ladies Caught in South Africa With Stolen Meat Stacked on Their Body by INTROVERT(f): 6:56am On Jun 17, 2017
shocked those aren't Nigerian girls
PoliticsRe: Another Hilarious Reply From EFCC by INTROVERT(f): 7:15pm On Jun 16, 2017
grin
CrimeRe: Vikings Vs KKK; Man Gunned Down By Suspected Cultists In Calabar. Graphic Photo by INTROVERT(f): 6:17pm On Jun 16, 2017
angry
CrimeRe: Joy Odama: Alhaji Usman Adamu, The Prime Suspect In Her Death Appears by INTROVERT(f): 10:09pm On Jun 15, 2017
angry no pics of him Chewing gworo huh
TravelRe: Masters Degree In Canada Or NYSC Program? by INTROVERT(f): 5:18pm On Jun 15, 2017
Once you do in your masters in Canada, you get a job afterwards. What are you coming back to Nigeria to do again.
CelebritiesRe: Pics: Don Jazzy Having Fun In Monaco by INTROVERT(f): 7:57pm On Jun 14, 2017
God willing...... Honeymoon in Monaco.




Who is the lady with him grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: [VIDEO]: Reno Omokri Revealed How Obama’s Govt, Others Worked Against Jonathan by INTROVERT(f): 7:51pm On Jun 14, 2017
sad
SportsRe: Cheick Tiote's Shock Death - African Players And Heart Failure by INTROVERT(op): 2:32pm On Jun 14, 2017
Cc Lalasticlala honeric01 grin
SportsCheick Tiote's Shock Death - African Players And Heart Failure by INTROVERT(op): 2:30pm On Jun 14, 2017
Cheick Tiote died at the age of just 30 last week after collapsing at training. Sportsmail can reveal Chinese club's facilities did not include a defibrillator.

Nine days on, Beijing Enterprises have still not explained why Tiote died but Investigation into ex-Newcastle star's death is certain to centre on his heart

One study in Nigeria suggests 75 per cent of footballers who have died through cardiac failure since 1990 are of African descent
There were plenty of people looking for a way to get Cheick Tiote into China four months ago, even though he'd fallen way down the pecking order at Newcastle United.

Agent Christopher Atkins, known for his links with Chinese clubs, says Tiote was 'offered' to him — though seemingly by an intermediary with no legitimate connection, looking to cash in on the Chinese football gold-rush.

'People are offering players for China who are not their players. You'll find there are four or five people between you and the player,' he says. Atkins, of RWMG Sports Asia, did not respond to the email extolling Tiote's skills.


THE TRAGIC TOLL


Players of African origin who have died from heart failure include:

Patrick Ekeng (Cameroon) - May 6, 2016

Cameroon international fell to the floor in the 70th minute of a televised Romanian league match between his side Dinamo Bucharest and Viitorul. Hospital staff were unable to resuscitate him on his arrival and was pronounced dead due to a heart failure two hours later.

David Oniya (Nigeria) - June 13, 2015


Nigerian footballer collapsed three minutes after kick-off in a friendly match for Malaysian outfit T-Team against Kelantan and died less one hour later in hospital.

Sekou Camara (Mali) - July 27, 2013


Collapsed on the field during Indonesian outfit's Pelita Bandung Raya, now known as Madura United, practice session in Bandung. He was rushed to the nearest hospital, but died on the way there. The cause of death was a heart attack.

Henry Chinonso Ihelewere (Nigeria) - August 5, 2012


The 21-year-old Delta Tulcea substitute collapsed during a friendly against Romanian rivals Balotesti. He was taken to hospital but he never regained consciousness.

Marc-Viven Foe (Cameroon) - June 26, 2003

Part of the Cameroon squad at the 2003 Confederations Cup in France, when he collapsed during his side's semi-final clash with Colombia. He was still alive when he arrived at the stadium's medical centre, but after being treated for 45 minutes he was pronounced dead. A second autopsy revealed he had died due to heart issues, with the discovery of a hereditary condition known to increase the risk of sudden death during physical exercise.

The player had been desperate to leave since the previous August, though his £50,000-a-week salary on Tyneside was the impediment. Would-be buyers wanted him on a free transfer because of the size of the salary, though Newcastle wanted a transfer fee.

Moves to Galatasaray, Russia and a Championship side had fallen through before Beijing Enterprises — a club in China's second tier named after a vast property company — agreed to pay the Ivorian £1.7million a year after tax. It was more than he received at Newcastle — and more than he would get anywhere else.

The acclimatisation was difficult. Beijing started the season disastrously, losing seven games out of eight under Bulgarian coach Yasen Petrov and Tiote started slowly in the oppressive March heat. 'He didn't look in the best shape and wasn't always playing,' says Atkins.

In May, the picture brightened. Former China national team coach Gao Hongbo replaced Petrov, began picking Tiote and the team began winning. He played in a 4-2 win over a North China region team Baoding Rongda on June 3.

Within 48 hours of that game he was dead, after collapsing on the team's state-owned training ground,
'If you look at any screening process, you are going to get some who screen as normal but have disease. This is called a 'false negative',' says Dr Ian Beasley, former England national team doctor and senior lecturer in Sports Medicine at Queen Mary University of London.

'It doesn't mean the individual has been screened wrongly, but that maybe there are other tests we don't yet have. There are always advances on the way in medicine. There are things we don't know.'

The desire to make it in football is leading some players to live with marginal risk. Sportsmail has established that one player's medical at a Premier League club last summer revealed a possible future cardiac risk — yet he moved to another club instead.

Former Millwall player Tobi Alabi, who suffered a heart attack on a pitch at 19 and runs screening charity Heart4More, believes football ambition clouds some players' willingness to be repeatedly screened.
Mohamed Diame's medical at Lens revealed a potential heart defect. Doctors advised him to never run again, let alone play football. Second opinions were sought and he now plays for Newcastle. Chelsea striker Loic Remy's known heart defect saw him fail a medical in 2010, but still join Marseille from Nice.

The medical complexities underline the need for China to have a medical infrastructure for players. Yet many sources in the country describe a shambolic set-up, even though the nation has witnessed a footballer's cardiac arrest in the past.

Serbian Goran Gogic, a 29-year-old at Qingdao Hainiu, collapsed on the team bus on the way home from training two years ago and could not be resuscitated.

'There was coverage for a day then it was swept under the carpet,' says one source. 'You never heard any more about it. I felt that it had never happened.'

China's accelerated football spending is fuelled by the riches of tycoons and enthusiasm of President Xi Jinping — a fan of the game who wants to turn China from a footballing backwater into an international power.

But after the latest overseas star has received a flashbulb welcome at the airport, he finds himself working out in a public gym.

'It's a plaything for the clubs' rich owners; a bubble,' says one source. 'There is no substance behind it.'

Tiote is remembered at Newcastle for his extraordinary work ethic. 'He trained like he played,' says an insider there. 'If anything, you'd have to calm him down because he gave his all. He never sulked when he fell down the pecking order.'

It was the same Tiote they saw in the heat of Beijing two Saturdays ago. He almost put through his own net at one stage just before half-time and his enthusiasm was as evident as ever.

'He was nine out of 10,' says one journalist who saw the game. 'He gave everything.
'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-4601020/Cheick-Tiote-African-players-heart-failure-linked.html

CrimeRe: Man Had Sex With His Wife In A Bush Before Killing Her & His 8-Year-Old Stepson by INTROVERT(f): 8:42am On Jun 14, 2017
Sad
PoliticsRe: If Osibanjo Does What I Say, There Will Be No Civil War- Okupe by INTROVERT(f): 8:12am On Jun 14, 2017
Ok

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