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Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 3:27pm On Dec 28, 2013
ketoprofen: https://www.nairaland.com/1562195/ndigbo-battles-soul-yorubaland

These are the 2013 conditions of yorubas.
These ppl on nairaland are just trying to cry over what they have lost.
And Lagos becomes a no mans land

IBO DRUG DEALER'S MANHOOD IS CUT OFF BY INDONESIAN PRISON WARDENS



Over 300 Nigerians languish in Indonesian prisons

By Chioma Gabriel
TIITO Henry Iyere, an indigene of Edo State had challenges in his business in Nigeria and decided to travel to Australia en route Indonesia in search of greener pasture. But he did not get to Australia.

He ended up at Indonesia where he served nine months in prison out of which he spent three in solitary confinement for standing surety for a man who borrowed $2,000 from an Indonesian and later ran away. His experience in prison opened his eyes to the travails of Nigerians serving prison terms in that country.

Excerpts:

What really happened to you in Indonesia?

It is a long story. I just came back from Indonesia where I was locked up for nine months in prison. I had a transaction with somebody whereby I stood as a guarantor for a friend who borrowed money from another person. I was taken to the police and locked up. I was later charged to court and I was in jail for nine months and within that period, I saw how most Nigerians that were convicted for one crime or the other were being maltreated.


TITO Henry Iyere...I was in prison for nine months

There was a case of one Igbo man called Tony whose manhood was chopped off by Indonesian police. I was told he was involved in drugs. He said somebody asked him to pick up something for him and he picked up the parcel and was on his way to deliver it to the person that sent him when he was arrested for drug peddling and his manhood was chopped off. I saw him in jail and he showed me his manhood and narrated how it was chopped off with a sharp scissors. I was so shocked.

There were so many other cases whereby, once you are a Nigerian and your visa expires, the Indonesian police would plant drug in your apartment and then arrest you for drug peddling. It happened to so many Nigerians whose visas expired. Some of them are now serving 10 to 20 years in prison.

Once you are a Nigerian and you have immigration problem, they would plant a substance in your apartment and label you a drug dealer and before you know it, they would take you to the police and if you call our embassy in that country, they don’t usually want to be associated with drug matters whether you really peddled drugs or not. And once you have been labelled a drug dealer, you would be taken to court and while in court, there would be nobody to defend you. In court, they would ask if you have a lawyer and you are not allowed any representation. They would take you to court and jail you. We had this case where a Nigerian was arrested and the police, they are called BN, went in search of that guy and till today, that guy is still missing. Nobody has been able to locate him.

The Nigerian community in Indonesia went in search of him but since the BN got him, nobody ever saw him again. We believe he was killed and nobody knows where he was buried. And there are many cases like that.

There’s somebody in jail over there and we can call him and ask him and he will tell you how that Nigerian guy got missing.

Is it confirmed that the Nigerian has died?

Well, nobody can find him several months after his arrest and nobody knew where he is. Other people who even have smaller cases of 419 are treated in similar manner. They don’t hang people for 419 or visa offences, except when they allege drug peddling against you. Nigerians were being given outrageous jail terms of ten years, twenty years, for offences their own people serve for six months. When I saw this, I told myself that when I get back to Nigeria, I would lay this complaint so that the Nigerian authorities would know what is going on with her people and if there is a way they can liaise with the Indonesian government, Nigerians serving different jail terms will get reprieve.

I learnt from one Nigerian prisoner that during the Obasanjo regime, he (OBJ) went to Thailand where he reached an agreement with the government of that country and Nigerians serving life jail terms in that country were released after four, five years and sent back to Nigeria to serve the rest of their terms. What I saw in Indonesian prison is a very terrible situation and I think the Nigerian government should do something. There is so much injustice done to Nigerians in that country. Even the president of Nigerians in diaspora in that country has made series of complaints over this but nothing was done.

Really, Nigerians serving jail terms in Indonesia need help because some of them have families here in Nigeria and their families don’t even know their people over there are in jail. They are languishing in jail and their families here in Nigeria cannot do anything. I was there, I know what was going on and I can tell you, it’s a bad situation. I came back on June 3, the day of the Dana aircrash. I complained to the people I know that things are not going on well with Nigerians in that country.

But Nigeria has an embassy in Indonesia, what is it doing about the problem?

For quite sometime, there was not an ambassador. There was an acting ambassador, Mrs. Izua and in the past, they always posted Hausas as ambassadors and there were few Nigerian Hausas in that country. Now, some of these past ambassadors are Muslims and most Nigerians, if not all in the prisons there are Christians. Really, it’s a bad case. I was about to killed but when my case was related to the ambassador representative, Mrs. Izua that they were about to kill me, she intervened. She was the ambassador representative for four, five months now. That woman took up the matter. She was really the one that saved me before the appointment of a new ambassador few weeks ago. That woman and one Mr. Yakubu were the ones who helped me. Otherwise, they would have killed me.

What took you to Indonesia?

I’m a businessman. Two years ago, somebody who came from there told me it would be easy for me to travel to Australia from Indonesia and New Zealand. I decided to go to Australia to look for work through Indonesia and that was what took to that country. I used to have a shop here in Nigeria and after the building where I had my shop was sold, I couldn’t afford another shop and I decided to go and work in Australia through Indonesia and that was it. I was jailed for nine months for standing as a surety for somebody who borrowed $2,000 dollars from a citizen of that country. Well, the person I stood surety for was not seen and he didn’t pay back the money and that was how they got me.

It was very difficult for me to raise money to travel to Indonesia. After the building where I had my shop was sold, somebody told me about job opportunities in Australia. I sold my car, raised N750,000 by rallying around my family. I got the visa but when I got to Indonesia, it was a different ball game. I called the guy who told me about the Australian connection but he said I should be patient. I was there waiting for my Australian contact until I stood surety for somebody who borrowed money and ran away. My offence was that I guaranteed the man would not run away but he did.

His house was still there but I didn’t know where the man went to but the police said that since I stood surety for him, I should pay the $2,000. Well, I paid the $2,000 with the help of the Nigerian community but I still got jailed by the court. It was the desperation to survive that took me to Indonesia. I was on my way to Melbourne, Australia to work.

Were you maltreated in prison?

I was in prison for nine months . The treatment meted out to Nigerians is different. Because of the drug involvement of some Nigerians, others are being maltreated as well. I had nothing to do with drugs and that was why the ambassador representative, Mrs. Izue came to my aid. But it didn’t stop them from maltreating me. Even the money that somebody borrowed from an Indonesian which I stood surety for was repaid but I was still maltreated. After serving my nine months, I didn’t have money to come back home and I was told they cannot buy ticket for a deportee.

It was a Nigerian in prison that volunteered to buy me a ticket. In Indonesian prisons, the Nigerians there are very big people. They are multi millionaires. But my case was different.

The embassy came to my aid because I didn’t push drugs. The embassy doesn’t help those that pushed drugs. They don’t involve themselves in such cases. I travelled legally to Indonesia. I got my passport legally. I got my passport in 2007 at Ikoyi near the old Secretariat. I travelled aboard Qatar Airline on the 10th June, 2010. I also had a Malaysian visa attached to my Indonesian visa. I returned 3rd of June this year.

What was the maximum term given to you before your escape?

I didn’t escape. I served out my term. I had no business going to prison for the offence I didn’t commit . In such an offence, once you returned the money, you are let off the hook but because I was a foreigner, they didn’t let me go. When my case came up again, the judge who handled the case in court asked why I was sentenced to prison after I have paid back the money I stood surety for. I went to jail because I was a foreigner.

What was your experience?

Well, in prison, I became a pastor. I won so many souls and when they saw that, they mellowed down. They have a church for Christians and a big Mosque for Muslims. There was also a place of worship for traditionalists.

My family suffered while I was away. My children were no longer going to school and so after my release, I had to return home to organise my family. I couldn’t continue to Australia. In fact, it was not possible or I wouldn’t have this ordeal. I was on solitary confinement for three months. I was isolated. I didn’t see anybody or talked to anybody for sixty days. I don’t speak their language. The guards would just bring food and pass it through the iron gate and disappear. I was alone and at a stage, I began to bang those gates and I did it for several days. I would be shouting prayers and singing worship songs until one day, they brought me out of isolation.

They wanted me to die in isolation but I kept telling myself aloud that I would not die there. They used all kinds of intimidation but I found a bible from American amnesty international which helped me a lot. The prison authorities didn’t allow the American amnesty group to see me. They have a lawyer but they didn’t let him see me. But I eventually came out of confinement after 60 days.

It was then that I began to go to church and began to meet other Nigerians.

How many Nigerians are in prison there?

There are over 300 Nigerians in Indonesian prisons. Out of that 300, 15 are on death row, eight are serving life imprisonment. Others who committed mild offences were being heaped together with drug dealers.

They are scattered in different prisons in Indonesia. In the prison where I served, there were seven of us. But let me tell you, the embassy doesn’t involve itself with problems that have to do with drugs or 419 and their police are unfriendly.

They usually tell you if they notice you’re a Nigerian that your passport is fake, that your embassy cannot come because they are scared, that they can kill you and nothing will happen. That’s how they kill Nigerians.

There’s a guy that is declared missing now. That guy is dead but his body was not found. They are killing Nigerians. They would have killed me, that was why they isolated me but the embassy came to my aid when they learnt my offence was minor.

A lot of Nigerians do drugs

I didn’t do drugs. I’m legit. I’m a businessman but after the building where I had my shop was sold, I was stranded here in Nigeria. I had to sell things to raise money to travel to Australia en route Indonesia but I never got o Australia. I ended up in prison in Indonesia and that was bad.

Nigerian government should dialogue with Indonesian government and help the plight of Nigerians in that country. Some people who should serve five, six years term are serving fifteen and twenty years. Some were falsely labelled drug dealers because their passports expired but rather than repatriate them, they label them drug-peddlers. In some cases, they planted the drugs themselves in their homes. I think the Nigerian government should look into these issues.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/06/my-ordeal-in-indonesian-prison-henry-iyere/#sthash.7SD5qzLw.dpuf
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:43pm On Dec 28, 2013
ichidodo: I think the joke is on you, do you know if i am an atheist?

Funny how Ibos who claim to be 99.99% Christian are suddenly and conveniently turning into atheists on this thread.

Aba logic on display

1 Like

Business / Re: Bianca Ojukwu: Marry A Very Old Man, Poison Him And Steal From His Children! $$$ by Italiano1: 1:41pm On Dec 28, 2013
....
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:34pm On Dec 28, 2013
ichidodo: Don't mind them they cling unto such delusions and call it culture.

But you believe in the Biblical story of creation? Or is that delusional as well?

It is clear you have lost the plot.
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:26pm On Dec 28, 2013
cashkid18: even afta awolowo's free education,d yaribas stil believe dt joke n they are stil teachin it to their children..
HOw cn 1 man gv birth to a population of +40milion pple.d Yoruba race must b a joke grin grin

You are the one exposing your dumbness in public. You are Ibo Christain- right? How did Adam give birth to 6 billion people on earth?

Cashkid please go back to your master's shop and sell markate, this is beyond your limited capability
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:19pm On Dec 28, 2013
Recently, I raised this issue, and myself and the thread created were adjudged bigoted. Today, it has been reported on this same site, though on another thread (https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-439215.0.html ) that the underlisted, ALL OF THEM IGBOS, are either awaiting execution or serving life jail sentences in Indonesia. Are you guys now willing to repent and swallow your words?

1. Kingsley Okonkwo
2. Michael Titus Igwe (Real name-Izuchukwu F. Ezimoha)
3. Uchenna Cajethan Onyenworo
4. Ekperedike S. Olekama,
5. Adam Wilson (real name-Emmanuel Okari)
6. Hillary K. Chimezie
7. Eugene Ape
8. Humphery Ejike
9. Okwudili Ayotaeze
10. Obinna Nwajiagu
11. Daniel Enemuo
12. Fredrick Lutter (Real name-Benjamin Obiora)
13. Sylvester Nwaolisa
14. Gabriel Nnadi
15. Dennis Anumona
16. Ikenna Ezenwune
17. Stephen Rashid
18. Joseph Ndaba
19. Ken Michael
20. Obinna George


=================================================================================


SHENZHEN: A Nigerian man received the death penalty Tuesday in Dongguan, Guangdong province, after being convicted of drug trafficking. Experts say it is the first case in the southern manufacturing city in which a foreigner has received a death sentence for drug trafficking.

His sentence was handed down from the Guangdong Higher People's Court. The execution still needs the review and final approval of the Supreme People's Court.

Osonwa Okey Noberts, 37, was found trading nearly 6 kg drugs to Chinese drug dealers at his rented apartment in Baiyun district of Guangzhou from February to April 2008, according to the investigation.

"Osonwa Okey Noberts took the drugs from the suppliers and sold them to the lower-tier buyers in China. The amount of heroin reached 5,978.1 grams. He deserves the most severe punishment," said a press release by the Intermediate People's Court of Dongguan, where the final verdict was announced.

Zhang Dongxiang, the 27-year-old Chinese girlfriend of Noberts, received a death sentence with a two-year reprieve for assisting the illegal trade.

They lived together starting in July 2007 but when she discovered almost six months later that the Nigerian was trafficking drugs, she rented another room next to their apartment to facilitate the trading and provided necessary help.

Two other Chinese drug dealers, Wu Xianjun and Jiang Xuzhi, also received death sentences with two-year reprieves for drug trafficking and employing people for the illegal activities. Policemen found guns and bullets in their homes when they were arrested in April 2008.

The Guangdong Higher People's Court upheld the convictions of the first trial at the Dongguan Intermediate People's Court in June last year but reduced the sentences on four of the convicts after taking into consideration their appeals, the report said.

According to China's criminal law, trafficking of more than 50 grams of heroin can warrant the death penalty.

Official statistics showed that drug trafficking by foreigners is becoming rampant in Guangdong.

Four foreigners, along with five other suspects, have been in custody since they were caught in Shenzhen for allegedly smuggling 144.5 kg of heroin from Pakistan in September 2009.

The Guangzhou Intermediate People's Court heard eight drug-trafficking cases, involving nine Africans, were involved, in November 2008. Eight received a stay of execution, while the ninth person was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Source:China Daily (http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/6915525.html )

Whenever you hear this kind of news, before you hear the name of the perpetrator, one can always bet it's an Igbo name. Why is this very very predominant amongst the Igbos lads and lasses. Traditionally, I respect the Igbos for their industriousness and creativity, but what's happening these days?



Who's Who in the Drug Peddling Hall of Shame.


1. Osonwa Okey Noberts, 37-year- old man (http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/6915525.html )


2. Ngozi Eneh, a 36-year-old mother of three (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/8239390.stm )


3. Vivian Chioma Metu, a 39-year-old woman (http://www.vanguardngr.com/2010/03/25/woman-39-conceals-1-5kg-of-heroine-inside-hair/ )


4. Stanley Nwanne Igbokaeze, a 47-year- old man (DOB 30 09 61) (http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/newsarticles/2009/july/nigerian-man-charged-in-drugs )


Please, feel free to add other names to this list, indicating your source(s).

(Quote) (Report) (Like)
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:17pm On Dec 28, 2013
IBO DRUG DEALER'S MANHOOD IS CUT OFF BY INDONESIAN PRISON WARDENS


Over 300 Nigerians languish in Indonesian prisons

By Chioma Gabriel
TIITO Henry Iyere, an indigene of Edo State had challenges in his business in Nigeria and decided to travel to Australia en route Indonesia in search of greener pasture. But he did not get to Australia.

He ended up at Indonesia where he served nine months in prison out of which he spent three in solitary confinement for standing surety for a man who borrowed $2,000 from an Indonesian and later ran away. His experience in prison opened his eyes to the travails of Nigerians serving prison terms in that country.

Excerpts:

What really happened to you in Indonesia?

It is a long story. I just came back from Indonesia where I was locked up for nine months in prison. I had a transaction with somebody whereby I stood as a guarantor for a friend who borrowed money from another person. I was taken to the police and locked up. I was later charged to court and I was in jail for nine months and within that period, I saw how most Nigerians that were convicted for one crime or the other were being maltreated.


TITO Henry Iyere...I was in prison for nine months

There was a case of one Igbo man called Tony whose manhood was chopped off by Indonesian police. I was told he was involved in drugs. He said somebody asked him to pick up something for him and he picked up the parcel and was on his way to deliver it to the person that sent him when he was arrested for drug peddling and his manhood was chopped off. I saw him in jail and he showed me his manhood and narrated how it was chopped off with a sharp scissors. I was so shocked.

There were so many other cases whereby, once you are a Nigerian and your visa expires, the Indonesian police would plant drug in your apartment and then arrest you for drug peddling. It happened to so many Nigerians whose visas expired. Some of them are now serving 10 to 20 years in prison.

Once you are a Nigerian and you have immigration problem, they would plant a substance in your apartment and label you a drug dealer and before you know it, they would take you to the police and if you call our embassy in that country, they don’t usually want to be associated with drug matters whether you really peddled drugs or not. And once you have been labelled a drug dealer, you would be taken to court and while in court, there would be nobody to defend you. In court, they would ask if you have a lawyer and you are not allowed any representation. They would take you to court and jail you. We had this case where a Nigerian was arrested and the police, they are called BN, went in search of that guy and till today, that guy is still missing. Nobody has been able to locate him.

The Nigerian community in Indonesia went in search of him but since the BN got him, nobody ever saw him again. We believe he was killed and nobody knows where he was buried. And there are many cases like that.

There’s somebody in jail over there and we can call him and ask him and he will tell you how that Nigerian guy got missing.

Is it confirmed that the Nigerian has died?

Well, nobody can find him several months after his arrest and nobody knew where he is. Other people who even have smaller cases of 419 are treated in similar manner. They don’t hang people for 419 or visa offences, except when they allege drug peddling against you. Nigerians were being given outrageous jail terms of ten years, twenty years, for offences their own people serve for six months. When I saw this, I told myself that when I get back to Nigeria, I would lay this complaint so that the Nigerian authorities would know what is going on with her people and if there is a way they can liaise with the Indonesian government, Nigerians serving different jail terms will get reprieve.

I learnt from one Nigerian prisoner that during the Obasanjo regime, he (OBJ) went to Thailand where he reached an agreement with the government of that country and Nigerians serving life jail terms in that country were released after four, five years and sent back to Nigeria to serve the rest of their terms. What I saw in Indonesian prison is a very terrible situation and I think the Nigerian government should do something. There is so much injustice done to Nigerians in that country. Even the president of Nigerians in diaspora in that country has made series of complaints over this but nothing was done.

Really, Nigerians serving jail terms in Indonesia need help because some of them have families here in Nigeria and their families don’t even know their people over there are in jail. They are languishing in jail and their families here in Nigeria cannot do anything. I was there, I know what was going on and I can tell you, it’s a bad situation. I came back on June 3, the day of the Dana aircrash. I complained to the people I know that things are not going on well with Nigerians in that country.

But Nigeria has an embassy in Indonesia, what is it doing about the problem?

For quite sometime, there was not an ambassador. There was an acting ambassador, Mrs. Izua and in the past, they always posted Hausas as ambassadors and there were few Nigerian Hausas in that country. Now, some of these past ambassadors are Muslims and most Nigerians, if not all in the prisons there are Christians. Really, it’s a bad case. I was about to killed but when my case was related to the ambassador representative, Mrs. Izua that they were about to kill me, she intervened. She was the ambassador representative for four, five months now. That woman took up the matter. She was really the one that saved me before the appointment of a new ambassador few weeks ago. That woman and one Mr. Yakubu were the ones who helped me. Otherwise, they would have killed me.

What took you to Indonesia?

I’m a businessman. Two years ago, somebody who came from there told me it would be easy for me to travel to Australia from Indonesia and New Zealand. I decided to go to Australia to look for work through Indonesia and that was what took to that country. I used to have a shop here in Nigeria and after the building where I had my shop was sold, I couldn’t afford another shop and I decided to go and work in Australia through Indonesia and that was it. I was jailed for nine months for standing as a surety for somebody who borrowed $2,000 dollars from a citizen of that country. Well, the person I stood surety for was not seen and he didn’t pay back the money and that was how they got me.

It was very difficult for me to raise money to travel to Indonesia. After the building where I had my shop was sold, somebody told me about job opportunities in Australia. I sold my car, raised N750,000 by rallying around my family. I got the visa but when I got to Indonesia, it was a different ball game. I called the guy who told me about the Australian connection but he said I should be patient. I was there waiting for my Australian contact until I stood surety for somebody who borrowed money and ran away. My offence was that I guaranteed the man would not run away but he did.

His house was still there but I didn’t know where the man went to but the police said that since I stood surety for him, I should pay the $2,000. Well, I paid the $2,000 with the help of the Nigerian community but I still got jailed by the court. It was the desperation to survive that took me to Indonesia. I was on my way to Melbourne, Australia to work.

Were you maltreated in prison?

I was in prison for nine months . The treatment meted out to Nigerians is different. Because of the drug involvement of some Nigerians, others are being maltreated as well. I had nothing to do with drugs and that was why the ambassador representative, Mrs. Izue came to my aid. But it didn’t stop them from maltreating me. Even the money that somebody borrowed from an Indonesian which I stood surety for was repaid but I was still maltreated. After serving my nine months, I didn’t have money to come back home and I was told they cannot buy ticket for a deportee.

It was a Nigerian in prison that volunteered to buy me a ticket. In Indonesian prisons, the Nigerians there are very big people. They are multi millionaires. But my case was different.

The embassy came to my aid because I didn’t push drugs. The embassy doesn’t help those that pushed drugs. They don’t involve themselves in such cases. I travelled legally to Indonesia. I got my passport legally. I got my passport in 2007 at Ikoyi near the old Secretariat. I travelled aboard Qatar Airline on the 10th June, 2010. I also had a Malaysian visa attached to my Indonesian visa. I returned 3rd of June this year.

What was the maximum term given to you before your escape?

I didn’t escape. I served out my term. I had no business going to prison for the offence I didn’t commit . In such an offence, once you returned the money, you are let off the hook but because I was a foreigner, they didn’t let me go. When my case came up again, the judge who handled the case in court asked why I was sentenced to prison after I have paid back the money I stood surety for. I went to jail because I was a foreigner.

What was your experience?

Well, in prison, I became a pastor. I won so many souls and when they saw that, they mellowed down. They have a church for Christians and a big Mosque for Muslims. There was also a place of worship for traditionalists.

My family suffered while I was away. My children were no longer going to school and so after my release, I had to return home to organise my family. I couldn’t continue to Australia. In fact, it was not possible or I wouldn’t have this ordeal. I was on solitary confinement for three months. I was isolated. I didn’t see anybody or talked to anybody for sixty days. I don’t speak their language. The guards would just bring food and pass it through the iron gate and disappear. I was alone and at a stage, I began to bang those gates and I did it for several days. I would be shouting prayers and singing worship songs until one day, they brought me out of isolation.

They wanted me to die in isolation but I kept telling myself aloud that I would not die there. They used all kinds of intimidation but I found a bible from American amnesty international which helped me a lot. The prison authorities didn’t allow the American amnesty group to see me. They have a lawyer but they didn’t let him see me. But I eventually came out of confinement after 60 days.

It was then that I began to go to church and began to meet other Nigerians.

How many Nigerians are in prison there?

There are over 300 Nigerians in Indonesian prisons. Out of that 300, 15 are on death row, eight are serving life imprisonment. Others who committed mild offences were being heaped together with drug dealers.

They are scattered in different prisons in Indonesia. In the prison where I served, there were seven of us. But let me tell you, the embassy doesn’t involve itself with problems that have to do with drugs or 419 and their police are unfriendly.

They usually tell you if they notice you’re a Nigerian that your passport is fake, that your embassy cannot come because they are scared, that they can kill you and nothing will happen. That’s how they kill Nigerians.

There’s a guy that is declared missing now. That guy is dead but his body was not found. They are killing Nigerians. They would have killed me, that was why they isolated me but the embassy came to my aid when they learnt my offence was minor.

A lot of Nigerians do drugs

I didn’t do drugs. I’m legit. I’m a businessman but after the building where I had my shop was sold, I was stranded here in Nigeria. I had to sell things to raise money to travel to Australia en route Indonesia but I never got o Australia. I ended up in prison in Indonesia and that was bad.

Nigerian government should dialogue with Indonesian government and help the plight of Nigerians in that country. Some people who should serve five, six years term are serving fifteen and twenty years. Some were falsely labelled drug dealers because their passports expired but rather than repatriate them, they label them drug-peddlers. In some cases, they planted the drugs themselves in their homes. I think the Nigerian government should look into these issues.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/06/my-ordeal-in-indonesian-prison-henry-iyere/#sthash.7SD5qzLw.dpuf


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/06/my-ordeal-in-indonesian-prison-henry-iyere/
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:13pm On Dec 28, 2013
Igbo Delta:
Yoruba/Fulani clash, Four feared dead

About four people were feared dead on Friday following a clash between Yoruba indigenes and Fulani people living at Alapa Village along Iseyin Road, Ilorin-East Local Government Area of Kwara State.

Trouble purportedly started on Monday when a Yoruba man, whose name is yet to be identified, was allegedly attacked and killed by yet-to-be-identified Fulani cattle rearers on a farmland.

Nigeria-policeThe victim was said to have died on the spot.



http://integrityreporters.com/news/yorubafulani-clash-four-feared-dead/


Police Uncover Another Baby Factory In Imo! Rescues 16 Pregnant Teenage Girls


[img]http://3.bp..com/-J2xucFovQwQ/Up7sTXWpf5I/AAAAAAAA3Dk/DC2T6Cr3TC8/s1600/preg.jpg[/img]

Some of the pregnant teenage girls being rescued by the police

The Police Command again has uncovered another baby-making factory in Egbu, near Owerri the State capital, arresting the proprietor, one Dr. James Ezuma who
runs a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO), and a clinic. 16 girls were
rescued in the process.

The girls were kept in two rooms in the building that houses his NGO, with no windows while repulsive odour oozed out from their rooms
The girls, aged 14-19 were encouraged to get pregnant and take home the sum of N10,000 at delivery, on the condition that they would abandon their babies who would be eventually used for purposes ranging from child trafficking to rituals.

The commissioner of Police has warned the general public to endeavour to keep an eye on their girls so that they would not fall prey to such miscreants like Dr. Ezuma, who does not mean well for the society.

One of the girls who spoke amidst tears said, her boyfriend rejected
the pregnancy and was directed here by her aunt. She said though she was given N10,000 after delivery, on the promise that they would train her baby, but she never knew her baby would be sold to unknown persons even without her consent.
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:06pm On Dec 28, 2013
customized13: this is the height of yorubalism in u, who is talking abt progenitor here, well this is the first time am seeing fatherless people doing better than fathered fellows, we igbos are unique, u cant just beat it, even without a father we beat u hands down. we have fore-fathers.

When they loose an argument, they resort to spewing unintelligible rubbish. At least you have acknowleddged you have no father, like I said to you and your cohorts yesterday, go and ask your elders how you became known as IGBO-

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 1:02pm On Dec 28, 2013
shymexx: Interesting thread...

However, I need to shut the revisionists up about the June 12 thing and the role(s) Igbo's played. Igbo's and Yoruba's have never been friends - and the two groups will never be friends. So you lot need to stop playing games and say it as it's.

June 12 timeline:



The voice of an Igbo leader:


http://themoment.com.ng/interview/item/900-okenze-osuigwe-opens-up-ndigbo-begged-ibb-to-annul-june-12

Superstar1 and eggheaders, you lot have been smashing nyggahs out of the boxes since Slick Rick was singing la da da dai...we just came to party...and not to bother nobody. Your punchlines are like murder she wrote - salute. I see you! wink

Where is Italiano1? angry angry


Lol Shymexx I dey. Thanks for enlightening us on the treachery of these people. Their hatred for Yorubas is well known but unfortunately, they can only watch as we progress
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:55pm On Dec 28, 2013
customized13: kk tell me, is sango not a god? is he not one of ur fore-fathers? u are dumb, he is one of ur fore-fathers u take as a diety.

The progenitor of Yorubas is Oduduwa- please tell us who the ibos descended from- Amadioha?

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:47pm On Dec 28, 2013
customized13: idiot then who is sango, orunmila etc are they not ur gods and fathers, put on ur thinking cap, u are as dumb as oduduwa.

Another illiterate digging a bigger grave for himself.

You do not know the difference between gods and progenitor?
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:43pm On Dec 28, 2013
customized13: have u heard of amadioha? he is as fine as hamson noah and emeka ike.

Are you being serious?? Is this this a joke? Even your brothers will slap you when the read the nonsense you have just written there
Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:41pm On Dec 28, 2013
Superstar- that is a befitting name. Okunrin Meta! Singlehandedly dealing with flat heads for over 12 hours and defeating them at their own game,

Ichidodo, you and your cohorts should hide your heads in shame

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:18am On Dec 28, 2013
ichidodo: Yobarr guys don't do school no more, yahoo-yahoo is the new school now how else is the dude is on call 24 hours a day on NL and elsewhere.If he doesn't get a maga he comes over to NL to vent his fustrations on those who gat real jobs.


Oh Really??

Who are the champions of kidnapping and Drug smuggling in this we country? grin grin shocked shocked

if you have not being denied visa to the Uk, US, Germany and Ireland - of course you will be a drug smuggler and a damn good one.

Please focus on your calling and destiny instead of wasting our time here

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:08am On Dec 28, 2013
cashkid18: lol.yaribas neva disapoints,they turned an interestin thread into tribal bashin bt wen igbos decided to heat it up,most of them dt started it ist logout n started viewing as guests cheesy grin

Coming from you? How many pictures have you put up tonite?

If I put the pictures of your people and the suffering you all endure in Lagos up , I would start getting messages asking for mercy. grin grin

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 12:06am On Dec 28, 2013
ichidodo: At end of the day Igbos are all over your supposed land and hittin it big time at your expense.Don't be a player hater, except if some dude takes away the Oloyin beans from your mouth


Hitting it big time where exactly?

In the traffic chasing after my people selling Gala?

Or at Ladipo where a Yoruba that owns one shop is the Babaloja that your master pays homage to on a daily basis?

What you call "hitting it big time" is relative- you mean the ability to for every Ibo houseboy in Lagos to get a Chieftaincy title in your village just because he says- I dey live for Lagos?

The easiest way to pfuck an Ibo girl in aba and nnewi is to say the magic word- " I go carry you go Lagos"

You should be utterly ashamed of your background and the unfortunate destiny bestowed upon you.

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:38pm On Dec 27, 2013
ifechez:


nsi nkita!!!!! all transport companies owned by igbos have their headquarters in either Onitsha or Aba. Orange drugs has its biggest warehouse along obodoukwu road while its industry is in the industrial layout. the likes of envoy, chicason and dossy oil companies produce their products in Onitsha or nnewi. actually, envoy is the sole supplier of vegetable oil to indomie noodles.

This is how the young ones decidedly fail Waec ,

Just because the HQ is located in your erosion decimated towns does not mean that this is where the profits are going.

Obviously, me explaining the intricacies of the above to you would be a waste of my pfucking time. You are one of the illiterates who shouts with an empty stomach on issues they know nothing about!

5 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:32pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: At least we don't kiss their asses unlike somebody i know of who is still leakin the sh**t of buhari's inspite of the rotten mess on the heads of Mko,Kudirat,Awo-ole,Alfred Rewane even Bola ige

grin grin

It is called sophistication and political wisdom- something you and your fore bearers lack in abundance!

We know how to give half with the left hand and collect whole with the right hand grin grin

We would not go to a war with 200 cutlasses and depend on Shineke! We are smart and would not mortgage the future of our children for a pot of Nkwobi grin grin

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:22pm On Dec 27, 2013
ifechez:

mumu!!! how do they make their money in Yoruba land? where are their industries located?

You call me Mumu while you are still alive? grin grin cool

Go and ask Ekene DiliChukwu the amount of his earnings went to Lagos government and Lagosians directly and indirectly while your people suffocate by living- 14 in a room and parlor.

Go and ask Chisco and ABC the same questions!


Do not let me educate you on Orange drugs, Young shall grow etc

Ask for the Oil related companies, you should know who the bosses are grin grin grin

Like I said to you, your job is primarily based on making life easier for my people! You are here for a reason and when we like, we deport you or /and stifle your source of existence !

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:10pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: No wonder y'all throwing slippers at the Abokis for starving you people of Oloyin beans, love your cowardice though, i mean value for human life

Another Crap from Ichidoddo- am I surprised? No! He is another Ibo illiterate

You should be worried with the way Abokis use Ibos as an avenue to manage their frustrations. Go and ask African China for further explanations!

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:04pm On Dec 27, 2013
ifechez:

Some Great Igbo men who have succeeded in life living in Igboland:

Ibeto
Innoson
Ekulo group
Juhel pharmaceutical
Krisoral group
Orange drugs
Envoy oil
Master energy
Chicason
Dossy group
GMO
VITA RICE
CHISCO MOTORS
YOUNG SHAL GROW
EKENE DILI CHUKWU
GUO MOTORS
EKESON MOTORS
ABC TRANSPORT
LOUIS CARTER INDUSTRIES
CUTIX CABLE
TUMMY TUMMY NOODLES
POKOBROS
NICHOLAS UKACHUKWU

..... BEAR IN MIND THAT I MENTIONED FEW OF ANAMBRAINS I KNOW AND HAVE NOT INCLUDED OTHER STATES.

This is getting ridiculous by the minute!!!

80% of those businesses you have mentioned make majority of their money from Yorubaland!!!

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 11:01pm On Dec 27, 2013
ketoprofen:

As far as it gives us money, no prob.


Now I see a thinking Ibo man! We want you to make money in Yorubaland!

We want you to experience things your region cannot provide, however it is important to note that your duty here is to make life easy for my people!

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:51pm On Dec 27, 2013
one.east1:
Empire is now achievement? Chaii

People can this backward? No wonder red mud house is cultural preservation in yorobar.. grin grin

No wonder 98% of yorobass are still living in the red mud house without sanitation..



As usual- no discernment whatsoever!

Empires show you have a history, a story! There is a timeline attached to your existence!

I would advise you to go and do a basic research on how you are referred to as Igbo! Please put into consideration that Igbo means BUSH in YORUBA language!

3 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:45pm On Dec 27, 2013
nku5:

See this one talking as if the success of lagos has ANYTHING to do with yoruba skill. You bombed our cities to dust and conspired with the northerners to underdevelop the east over three decades and una say make we no migrate to our former capital and recipient of our commonwealth oil money again?

When FG dey build third mainland bridge and all the infrastructure it was all good. Na now una know say una be yoruba first and not nigerians. Its too late o.


That is the difference between Yorubas and you! Go and do a research on the philosophy of "AKOSILE".

You are destined to be a landlocked region with no future or prospects! The only way any of you can make any headway in life is to migrate from your region!

Show me any Ibo man or woman who has ever succeeded in Life without living in Yorubaland or outside of Alaibo?

Lagos is a product of Yoruba acumen and wisdom! You are only here to facilitate the progress of a Yoruba state- you are an immigrant here.

As you would know, when you trespass, you would be deported to Uppy Iweka at ungodly hours without any consequence!

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:35pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: With one mouth you say iboids will not rule Nigeria now you are throwin a fit because we don't want anythin to do with Tinubu but Goodluck, knowing how you lazy fucktards depend on Government for family support.Sorry, GEJ till 2019

You are not making any sense Ichidodo grin grin

What I am trying to say to you is that you are destined to be followers. You do not have the intelligence or the cohesion to rule Nigeria- what a daft proposition! grin grin

Your role in this country is to obey the laws of the lands that you all migrate to, pay your taxes when they are due and we will educate your children and spare them of the abominable tragedy they face in Alaibo.

Of course as Yorubas, we would not exterminate you like it is done in the North! We value human life! You should bow down and worship Yorubas for facilitating your existence!

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:27pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: Don't you see that poverty and Insecurity are the hallmarks of the yoruba culture?!! You need to level with the wretches

Poverty??

Go and fulfill your destiny which is to serve my hardworking Yoruba People at all times!




The wise ones among your pathetic lot- enjoy suffering to make life easy for Yorubas

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:20pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: Yeah and you pass the insecurity on to the poor child, maybe insecurity is your heritage since you yamheads are adept at passing it from generation to generation.[b] So lazy,Ugly and insecur[/b]e

See who is talking about laziness and insecurity? grin grin

Your region has turned to the laughing stock of the nation. You all worship an Ijaw man who is using iboids as a pawn in his game to actualize his political dreams. You should be ashamed of yourselves!

One day you are the Japan of Africa, the next day you are Israelites- you are a clueless bunch

6 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:13pm On Dec 27, 2013
eaglechild:
Thank goodness there are still some sensible SWesterners on this forum.

The BROWNERY I've seen from the Ibadan pics is sickening.

And Alaibo is paradise which is why Iboids, their ancestors, contemporaries and generations yet unborn decidedly migrate from your decimated towns and villages on a daily basis?

2 Likes

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:10pm On Dec 27, 2013
hercules07:

Let us debunk their lies in a clean way, those ladies are victims of circumstances, I have posted some pictures of Ibadan skyline and defended the google search.

My friend - no war can be fought in a clean way! You should know this! You should go and talk to the eddiots portraying Yorubas in a negative light - if they cant stand the phucking heat? Let them get the pfuck out the kitchen- simples!!

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 10:04pm On Dec 27, 2013
superstar1:

Italiano1

Are those not baby factory machines of Onitsha.

Super- how far?

Ichidodo and Cashkid are better placed to answer that question

1 Like

Politics / Re: The Population Density Of Igbo Land by Italiano1: 9:57pm On Dec 27, 2013
ichidodo: Haahaahaa gotten into his Oloyin bean sized head Anumpama

Which of these is your sister?




Oloyin beans na food, at least we are not starving and desperate to the point where innocent young girls are used for commercial purposes

4 Likes

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