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HealthRe: Coronavirus: Private Physicians Treating Chinese Nationals Infected With Virus. by jieta: 8:31am On Feb 29, 2020
Greediness
BusinessRe: Apart From Yahoo, What Are You Doing To Make Money Online? by jieta: 12:36pm On Feb 26, 2020
Chimeluv:
the payment methods are on the site.
Please send to any of my gmail please


Ogogorojieta@gmail.com


bigejieta@gmail.com
BusinessRe: Apart From Yahoo, What Are You Doing To Make Money Online? by jieta: 12:33pm On Feb 26, 2020
[quote author=Chimeluv post=86944325]check your email. I am not a guy angry[/quotep]ogogorojieta@gmail.com
PoliticsRe: Nigeria Is SAFER Than The USA. Discuss. by jieta: 8:54am On Feb 26, 2020
oldbende:
Your report is based on U.S crime data, does this zoo called Nigeria have data? How then can you calculate the murder and crime rate in Nigeria. I live in America and I can go anywhere at any time of the day without being afraid of anybody. I was in the zoo last two Christmas and I didn't sleep in the village one day, I slept in a hotel in my state capital every day avoid any sad story. And you dare come here to insult people, you must be very stupid, out of your mind.
From your write up, i assume that by now everybody must have been dead by now and only you that was wise enough to hire a hotel in your state capital as the soul surviver from your village
PoliticsRe: Nigeria Is SAFER Than The USA. Discuss. by jieta: 8:25pm On Feb 25, 2020
ContractKiller:
Firstly, the United States is a much bigger country than Nigeria with a population of 325 million compared to Nigeria's 200 million. So it is only expected that more crimes will be committed there.

Secondly, about 95% of crimes in Nigeria are not reported and when they are, they don't always end up in court. I worked with a Child's Right NGO in Lagos for about 3 years and while I was there, I can tell you that at least 8 out of every 10 perpetrators of child rape whom we reported to the police, ended up walking out of prison within just one week of being arrested because their families had "settled" the family of the victims and also settled the police. In fact the police will even get a bigger settlement than the victims family.

Thirdly, the Nigerian police is hands down possibly the worst and most incompetent law enforcement body in the world. Its men and women are poorly trained, poorly equipped and poorly motivated. The Nigerian police itself actually runs like a criminal organisation. They run several extortion rackets all over the country where they force motorists to part with money at gunpoint. That means when you're counting criminals in this country, you have to include the Nigerian police if you're being honest.

There's just no comparison between the United States and Nigeria. One is a well organized country, while the other is a joke pretending to be a country.
And those American police are perfect there don't extort, there are well motivated everything is perfect in America.
PoliticsRe: Bode George: Tinubu Failed As Lagos Governor, He Can't Be Nigeria's President by jieta:
Why the constant attack on tinubu personality, why not sell your self to Nigeria tell us what difference you will bring to the table.
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 1:22pm On Feb 24, 2020
Blueelf:
Bros, I agree with you. That Chukwueze especially is a very overrated player and the annoying thing is that the praise singing seems to be getting to his head. There's been no improvement on his part. He needs serious competition in the SE. I will not even place him in the top 3 players in Villarreal. And everything you said about Osimhen is right.
If we don't hype our players who will do it for us. Go to facebook and see how those South Africans worship there players even those ones that play in backwater league. Those ones that have carpentry as their profession disguising as footballers.


With the exception of few, our team is filled with players in the top league, most command starting berth unlike then when we have bench warmers everywhere, we have every reason to hype them. it has never been good like this.
InvestmentRe: Get Paid For Sharing, Liking, Commenting And Post Photos Of Anything Around You by jieta: 9:18am On Feb 24, 2020
Ogogorojieta@gmail.com
BusinessRe: Football (+/Other Sports) Betting Season 14 by jieta: 9:42pm On Feb 16, 2020
Neimar:
Maccabi Tel Aviv (basketball) blacklisted forever angry
please how do you bet basket ball game




if you don't mind can you explain the over and under for me.
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 11:28am On Feb 14, 2020
LaMujer:
na wa o. We're still dragging whether or not Yobo?



smh, abeg, i watched on news yesterday that Nigeria has moved 4 places up in the FIFA rankings. We're now 31st in the world, 3rd in Africa

Senegal 1st, 20th
Tunisia 2nd, 27th
Nigeria 3rd, 31st


We should be celebrating another jump forward abeg
This is stale news, i think this was the ranking caf use to group us for the world cup qualifiers. Am not sure if fifa has release this month ranking.
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 7:49pm On Feb 13, 2020
andrewbaba44:
So because omeruo is a core member when we won the Means he is better than Yobo ?

You are just confusing your self by even adding ekong Seems you are going by a core member that won the afcon ,even oboabona is better than Yobo self

Judging a player going by trophy ,if so then Mario gotze is better than Messi because he won Germany the World Cup and Messi could not

Ogbeni go and sit down abeg

That’s why dem Dey call most of una beer Parlour fans

How can a sane person thinks ekong and omeruo is better than Yobo
That is why i said you should enlighten me, how did you come to the conclusion that yobo is better than both players? What yardstick did you use? You should educate me, you can't just make bogus comment and expect people not to talk about it. Is it because he's the first player to reach a centenary with the super eagles or what.


OK I Don commot the ekong Oya tell me how yobo take better pass omerou
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 7:32pm On Feb 13, 2020
andrewbaba44:
We all know Yobo is better than both

But is that the argument?

How does that even connect to justify Yobo being the coach
I believe you are the only one that knows that yobo is better than omerou and ekong. But i will be very happy if you can enlighten me more about it.



Omerou was a core member when we won the Nation cup while yobo was a peripheral part of the team. Ekong won bronze for us at the last olympic. What is it that yobo has done that make him better than ekong and omerou.
PoliticsRe: Supreme Court Sacks David Lyon, Orders Diri Duoye To Be Sworn In by jieta: 1:58pm On Feb 13, 2020
Is either buhari or supreme Court, surely one of them will set Nigeria on fire
CelebritiesRe: Photos Of Hippotamus Caught & Killed By Fishermen In Kebbi Community by jieta: 6:55am On Feb 11, 2020
H
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 9:16am On Feb 09, 2020
eazyjakes:
I think his thoughts are that the Super Eagles as a brand diminishes if it continues to make itself a readily available alternative or second choice to foreign bred Nigerians. He wants an improved local system dat will ensure players totally committed to us are the ones who dorn the green jersey. These committed players can be local or foreign based but they will give us their heart at all times without any ulterior/questionable motives!
I agree with his submission about Moses, like if Victor was playing for England i don't think he will retire so early, but is all good any way we have found some alternative and we need to move on.
PoliticsRe: Look At What I Saw In Ebonyi State (pix) by jieta: 9:54am On Feb 08, 2020
pheelhip:
We should stop praising this man, if uve toiled Ebonyi very well, you will agre with me that Abakaliki, Afikpo north and Okposi which is the Governors village are the most developed part of Ebonyi state, hence the reason why pple see it and rain praises on him, upload pictures of other villages and lets see. most of the pictures i have been seeing here are mostly shot pictures of Abakaliki flyovers, only a part of Ebonyi is well developed while others are underdeveloped and left to a state of decay which is not worth all those praises.

Human development is there too, he should consider paying his workers well. they are suffering under his nose.
Was the state created four years ago? Was there a clust that previous government should not develop there villages. If the previous govenmemt had done half of what the current administration is doing Only GOD knows how the state would look like. So for those singing abakaliki praise let them continue the governor deserve praise.
PoliticsRe: Look At What I Saw In Ebonyi State (pix) by jieta: 9:52am On Feb 08, 2020
pheelhip:
We should stop praising this man, if uve toiled Ebonyi very well, you will agre with me that Abakaliki, Afikpo north and Okposi which is the Governors village are the most developed part of Ebonyi state, hence the reason why pple see it and rain praises on him, upload pictures of other villages and lets see. most of the pictures i have been seeing here are mostly shot pictures of Abakaliki flyovers, only a part of Ebonyi is well developed while others are underdeveloped and left to a state of decay which is not worth all those praises.

Human development is there too, he should consider paying his workers well. they are suffering under his nose.
Was the state created four years ago? Was there a clust that previous government should not develop there villages. If the previous govenmemt had done half of what the current administration is doing Only GOD knows how the state would look like. So for those singing abakaliki praise let the governor deserve.
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta:
Tough luck, Nwakaeme:Rohr's Nigeria is no country for old men.

The 30-year-old has been one of the standout players in Turkey this season, but is the victim of an aggressive youth drive by the Super Eagles coach
Amid the uncertainty that surrounds the future of Super Eagles coach Gernot Rohr, it is perhaps proper to begin to evaluate his legacy.


Beyond arresting a rut that had seen
Nigeria fail to qualify for consecutive editions of the Africa Cup of Nations , the German’s greatest impact is his determined slashing of the national team’s average age.
At the 2018 World Cup, Nigeria’s squad had the youngest squad in the competition, with an average age of 25.9 years; a year later, that average had dropped further to 24.3, the third lowest at the Afcon.
Editors' Picks


It is a policy that has seen excitement around the national team reach unprecedented heights. There is nothing quite as intoxicating as potential; the likes of Wilfred Ndidi, Victor Osimhen, Samuel Chukwueze, Ola Aina and Chidozie Awaziem are unquestionably on an upward trajectory, and should be mainstays in the Super Eagles for many years to come.


Where he has been rather less successful is in finding a proper balance with experience.
The retirement of John Obi Mikel means that, leaving aside Ahmed Musa, the current oldest Nigerian outfield international is 27-year-old Ramon Azeez, who only recently made a return from a five-year absence.
Indeed, in the entire span of his four-year tenure, Rohr has only handed a maiden call-up to one player over the age of 27: Anthony Nwakaeme played against
Algeria in a World Cup qualifier in 2017, but has not received another call-up since.
The situation surrounding the Trabzonspor man is an instructive one, and reveals a potential flaw in the German’s coach’s relentless youth recruitment drive.
While it can hardly be said that there is a substantial cache of potential game-changers aged between 27 and 30 who could immediately improve the Super Eagles, a blanket cold-shoulder approach to that demographic arguably presents something of a paradox in Rohr’s avowed meritocracy.


How can his mantra of consistency and high performance exclude a player who has, so far this season, been directly involved in 13 goals in 18 league appearances?
Surely then, these are not the foremost considerations.


There is a growing sense that Rohr’s insistence on youth is not entirely selfless at all, but is rooted in self-preservation and vanity. For one thing, it allows him, as he did at the World Cup and, to a lesser extent, at the Afcon, to cite his side’s inexperience as an excuse for mishandling certain situations.


When Nigeria failed to keep a hardly swashbuckling Argentina at arm’s length, he bemoaned their lack of nous despite having failed to address a tactical weakness that had been present all game. When Algeria flagged physically in Cairo last July but his side failed to turn the screw, he implied the players had been unable to recognise the opportunity to go for broke and had instead been anticipating extra time.


Beyond the youth of his squad acting as a shield against personal criticism, it also burnishes his wider legacy. Considering African nations can only realistically aspire to one senior international trophy – the Afcon – to be seen as the midwife of a new ‘Golden Generation’ for a continental powerhouse is probably the next best thing.


Perhaps this view is much too cynical. Coaches after all have their preferences – some believing the pliability of youth makes them more receptive to instruction and guidance, others more willing to bank on the experience within the squad to manage certain situations both on and off the pitch.


Rohr’s style so far has been a bit hybrid; he has been willing to lean on the leadership of Mikel and Musa, but has been reluctant to add more players of that same level of age or experience into the mix.


Tough luck then for a player like Nwakaeme, now 30, who received very little patience when he was afforded his shot close to three years ago.


Played out of position in a dead rubber in Blida, he had a rather forgettable time leading the line and has seemingly ceased to exist. That despite those aforementioned numbers, but also in spite of his work rate, dribbling ability (3.4 dribbles per 90) and playmaking (5 big chances created, 1.6 key passes per 90).


It seems unlikely that anything will change in that regard, even as meetings with Sierra Leone loom. Rohr has evinced a great deal of patience for the variance in performance from younger players (understandably) and those to whom he has taken a shine, but has been quick to jettison the older ones upon a poor showing; Mikel and John Ogu tellingly played no further part following their displays against Madagascar at the Afcon, but the likes of Ola Aina and Jamilu Collins have enjoyed a lot more leeway despite some high-profile errors.


It hardly seems fair, but it at least follows a consistent, identifiable pattern of behaviour upon which an unfortunate prediction can be made.


However many defenders Nwakaeme blows past now or in the months to come, the national team will remain very much closed to him, and by extension to players in his age bracket. https://www.goal.com/en-ng/news/tough-luck-nwakaeme-rohrs-nigeria-is-no-country-for-old-men/1phx0fsblb8bk1j4a6bbp7pr1d
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 9:32am On Feb 01, 2020
Subzero047:
Rohr made sure he finished top scorer in two tournaments, do you know what that did to his resume?
I tell you, i dont think there is any player of recent memory who has done that. Most of us here underrate ighalo and see where his perseverance has take him to.
CrimeRe: My Experience At The Police Station Today. by jieta: 1:37pm On Jan 30, 2020
donstan18:
Phone wey em panel fit dey Zamfara now, battery dey Onitsha, screen dey Lagos, phone pack dey Aba, while your SIM card dey one yahoo guy hand for Owerri.

Na em you and police wan track
lol, Who know if the batterry fit dey even sambisa

But on a serious note, op should let go intstead of spending 30k on police with out any hope of the fone been found.
PoliticsRe: President Buhari And Service Chiefs In Closed-Door Meeting by jieta: 12:04pm On Jan 30, 2020
h
Foreign AffairsRe: Hundreds Of Fulani Iswap Armed Militants In Mali- Photo & Video by jieta: 2:45pm On Jan 29, 2020
sarrki:
I was born and brought up in the north

I live almost 4 decades up north northwest about 3 decades.

north central and northeast 1 full decade

That’s Fulani language yan uwa
Na so you old reach before you dey fool Your self any how for nairaland Abi. God dey watch you.
SportsRe: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by jieta: 4:21pm On Jan 27, 2020
World cup 2022: predicting Africa's 10 group winner.

Group A


Algeria will be delighted with their group stage draw, after being pooled into one of the more favourable of the 10 groups. Niger and Djibouti were among the weaker teams in their groups, with the latter the lowest ranked nation left standing in the campaign.
Burkina Faso, the Pot Two team, aren’t the force they once were, and were among Africa’s highest profile absentees from the expanded 24-team Africa Cup of Nations last summer.



Group B


Tunisia are rarely eye-catching during qualification, but they typically get the job done. Don’t expect any different this time around.


Even though they were unconvincing at the Nations Cup, they have enough guile and grinta to see off Mauritania and Equatorial Guinea.


Zambia, like Burkina Faso, aren’t as strong as they have been over the last decade, although if a talented crop of players realise their potential under Milutin Sredojevic, they could capitalise on any Tunisian complacency.


Group C


Nigeria are overwhelming favourites here, and they’ll be boosted by the presence of relative minnows Central African Republic and Liberia.


Despite their tiny stature compared to the Super Eagles, Cape Verde represent Nigeria’s primary threat. They dumped the regional giants out of the Wafu Cup last year, and a recent 0-0 draw with


Cameroon was evidence of how they can neutralise the continent’s heavyweights.
However, it’s hard to see the islanders having enough consistency to unseat Gernot Rohr’s side from top spot.


Group D


Cameroon were the unfortunate top seeds to be drawn against Pot Two’s biggest threat—the Ivory Coast —in Tuesday’s draw.


Mozambique and Malawi have shown signs of quality over the last 18 months, but this one will surely boil down to the top two.
And I believe that the Indomitable Lions will fall short. The Elephants have begun to turn the corner after a poor World Cup 2018 qualifying campaign, and the likes of Nicolas Pepe, Maxwel Cornet and Wilfried Zaha should be able to outgun most opponents.


If Serge Aurier, Franck Kessie and Eric Bailly can rediscover the form they enjoyed earlier in their careers, than the Elephants can go all the way to Qatar.


Group E



Like Group D, I’m predicting the seeds will miss out on top spot here.


While Mali are favourites, on paper, to advance, Uganda are one of Africa’s coming forces, and have come on leaps and bounds over the last three years.


Johnny McKinstry is continuing the fine work of Milutin Sredojevic and Sebastien Desabre, and he has some fine talent at his disposal as they look to become East Africa’s first World Cup qualifiers.


I’m not ruling out Kenya also upsetting the established order, but while this group is there for the taking, the Cranes are my pick.


Group F


Egypt won’t have it as easy as some are suggesting, even though I believe that they’ll have enough to advance.


Libya and Angola are tougher than their Fifa world ranking may suggest, although while Gabon have Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, their structural dysfunction and a lack of quality in the supporting cast suggests that qualification may be beyond them.


Despite their poor Afcon, Egypt are a rugged bunch, and crucially, they have experience of getting over the line in World Cup qualification.


Group G


Having been pitted together in the Afcon 2021 qualifying campaign, Ghana and
South Africa are set to meet again on the road to Qatar .


The Black Stars won 2-0 in Cape Coast in their recent Nations Cup qualifying bout, but following the departure of Kwasi Appiah and the arrival of Charles Akonnor, the West Africans are something of an unknown quantity again.



If Bafana Bafana can build on their encouraging showing under Stuart Baxter in 2019—particularly at the Nations Cup—then they could leapfrog a vulnerable Ghana side into top spot.


Group H


Senegal will be delighted with this draw, and I can certainly see them taking top spot.
In the likes of Sadio Mane, Mbaye Diagne and Habib Diallo, they boast plenty of game-winners, and their rivals—Congo-Brazzaville, Namibia and Togo—just can’t bring the same quality to the table.


The Red Devils, Senegal’s nearest rivals, were defeated 2-0 by the Teranga Lions in Thies in November, and I can’t see them upsetting the odds here.



While Togo’s Claude Le Roy deserves immense respect for his work in African football, the Sparrow Hawks would need to improve immensely—they were recently defeated 1-0 at home by the Comoros—if they’re to progress.


Group I


Like a few other heavyweights, Morocco can be particularly delighted with their draw.
The Atlas Lions will still need to adapt to life under Vahid Halilhodzic following their disappointing Afcon showing and the exit of Herve Renard.


However, in Hakim Ziyech, they boast the finest African playmaker in the game today, and as he demonstrated during the 2018 World Cup qualifying campaign, he’s more than capable of carving Africa’s lesser nations apart.


Guinea-Bissau and Sudan will aim to frustrate the Atlas Lions, who are also likely to have too much for Naby Keita’s Guinea.


Group J


Comfortably the most open group of the 10, where all four teams will harbour tangible ambitions of progressing as group winners.
All four qualified for the Nations Cup, with only Tanzania falling at the first hurdle, and even the East Africans have a cutting edge of their own.


Benin and Madagascar cannot be overlooked; they’ve broken new ground over the last 18 months, and both have proven that they can stymie—and even beat—the continent’s biggest sides.


The Democratic Republic of Congo have the history, and have players in some of the world’s top leagues, but there’s a sense that they’ve come to the end of a cycle. Florent Ibenge has departed, and his replacement, Christian Nsengi-Biembe, has no experience at this level.


The Leopards may be the favourites, but Benin’s ruggedness, physicality and guile make them my pick to progress. https://www.goal.com/en-ng/lists/world-cup-2022-predicting-africas-10-group-winners/kdo5p6pv28na1nn48thbcw9eg
Jobs/VacanciesRe: I Am Tired Of Life, I Have Left My Family Permanently by jieta: 1:34pm On Jan 25, 2020
Na wa, sometimes i mavel at the way some People think. Your dad family could not kill you when Your mum conceive you, there could not when you were still a baby even when you finish Your primary and secondary there could not harm you now you manage to graduate all hell let loose.


Please my Friend life is a phase this phase will soon pass stop apportioning Your inability to get a good job or financial incapabilities to Your paternal parants.

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