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Politics / Trending: Buhari, Wife, Others Shun Made-in-nigeria Products by Joyloaded: 6:43pm On Nov 06, 2016
Despite the Federal Government’s consistent calls on Nigerians to patronise Made-in-Nigeria products in order to strengthen the economy and aid national development, SUNDAY PUNCH’s investigation has shown that President Muhammadu Buhari and members of his team are using foreign products.

The investigation showed that except their clothes, the President and his team have been using foreign products ranging from their shoes to their cars.

For instance, there was outcry especially on social media platforms recently when Buhari was spotted in a pair of Gucci 1953 horsebit loafer shoes.

The price of the shoes was put at $640 at that time.

Not a few Nigerians were surprised that with his acclaimed austere lifestyle, the President could be spotted in such expensive imported shoes.

Further investigation showed that none of the vehicles in the President’s convoy was manufactured or assembled locally.

His official car is a Mercedes Maybach S600 described as “an extra highlight in the luxury segment.”

The vehicle in base-line configuration is said to cost around $258,000.

The President’s wife, Aisha, has also been attracting comments to herself lately over the various expensive and foreign fashion accessories that she uses.

She had earlier been spotted holding a Hermes Birkin 35cm Porosus Crocodile Gold Hardware Bag in Washington DC recently.

The bag was said to be worth over $70,000.

A Hermes Himalayan Crocodile Birkin bag was said to have been auctioned for $432,000 recently.

A news portal had claimed that the pink version of Mrs. Buhari’s Hermes handbag was auctioned in 2015 for $222,912 at a Christie’s auction in Hong Kong.

Shortly after that, the President’s wife was again on October 18 spotted wearing a $2,600 multicoloured cape to Brussels.

She was also said to have been seen with an expensive diamond wristwatch by Chopard.

A look at Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo’s convoy also showed that most of the cars are expensive imported cars except for the Nissan Patrol Sports Utility Vehicle being used by some security operatives.

The SUVs were manufactured in Nigeria.

Our correspondent also observed that Buhari’s 36 ministers have Toyota Land Cruiser VXR V8 cars as their officials cars.

The President’s security chiefs also ride exotic bulletproof BMW cars.

But when contacted on the matter, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, told SUNDAY PUNCH that the President and Vice-President are already leading by example.

Shehu however said it was not the idea of government that officials should stop riding cars made abroad simply because those cars were bought overseas.

Such, he said, would be ridiculous and result to a waste of resources.

He said, “It is not the idea of government that its officials should stop riding cars made abroad simply because those cars were bought overseas. That will be ridiculous, and a waste of resources.

“The purchase and use of home made goods and services is a new campaign that will take time to fully entrench itself. This country has not banned the importation of goods.”

Source; http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/trending-buhari-wife-others-shun-made.html

Sports / Re: Ifeanyi Ubah Defeat Nasarawa Utd To Win 2016 Federation Cup by Joyloaded: 6:35pm On Nov 06, 2016
Space Booked
Sports / Ifeanyi Ubah Defeat Nasarawa Utd To Win 2016 Federation Cup by Joyloaded: 6:35pm On Nov 06, 2016
Ifeanyi Ubah Football Club defeated Nasarawa United 4-3 on penalties, on Sunday, to emerge winners of the federation cup.

The game was tied at goalless after regulation time.

The Anambra Warriors will represent Nigeria in the CAF Confederation Cup next season.

Details soon…

http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/ifeanyi-ubah-defeat-nasarawa-utd-to-win.html

Romance / Re: I Can’t Marry A Poor Guy, He Has To Be Successful And Likes S*x–linda Ikeji Says by Joyloaded: 6:28pm On Nov 06, 2016
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Romance / I Can’t Marry A Poor Guy, He Has To Be Successful And Likes S*x–linda Ikeji Says by Joyloaded: 6:27pm On Nov 06, 2016
The Super blogger and multi-millionaire, who is seriously searching for a husband has revealed he needs a man that is good in bed and must not be rich but successful.

Nigerian blogger, Linda Ikeji.

Popular Nigerian blogger, Linda Ikeji has opened up about the features she wants in a man. The multi-millionaire has revealed that any man that wants to marry her must be good in bed.

In a recent interview reported by Vanguard, she is quoted as saying: “I’m getting quite a lot of proposals. You know people say when a woman is successful, men run away, it’s a lie, that is when they chase you the more. But unfortunately, I haven’t seen what I’m looking for. To be honest, I keep telling people, it’s not like men are scarce, it’s the type of man some of us are looking for that is scarce, if I want to marry next year I can, but he would not be the kind of man I want.

I want a man that I can look up to, someone that inspires me, someone that would push me, someone that would motivate me, somebody that has had some success in his own career path, then I can look up to him and be like “wow”, a man that teaches me and I can learn from. I’m inspired by successful people, someone like Tyler Perry, I can’t wait to meet him. I can’t marry a poor guy, I’m being honest about it, no I can’t, he doesn’t have to be very rich but let him be successful in his own way. You may come across some successful men but there is something wrong there, so the whole package is what I’m looking for.

When I was like 30-years old, my standards were very high, extremely high, but I wasn’t looking at marrying, I was just focused on work because I’ve always been so ambitious that I wasn’t focusing on marriage or kids. I felt like I should just do what I wanted to do. It was just recently that I began to think about marriage, and to be honest, my requirements are only three now.

He must be successful, he must be a good man, in the sense that he must be supportive of me, if he tries to stifle me then I’m out. Lastly, he has to be a man that likes s*x and must be very good at it.”.

http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/i-cant-marry-poor-guy-he-has-to-be.html

Romance / Re: My Boyfriend Dump Me After Our First Time Sex - Nigeria Young Lady by Joyloaded: 11:20am On Nov 06, 2016
lol
Politics / Re: $29.9bn Loan’ll Rescue Nigeria From Recession — Gbajabiamila by Joyloaded: 10:47am On Nov 06, 2016
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Politics / $29.9bn Loan’ll Rescue Nigeria From Recession — Gbajabiamila by Joyloaded: 10:46am On Nov 06, 2016
Toluwani Eniola

The Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, has applauded President Muhammadu Buhari’s external borrowing plan of $29.9bn for the execution of projects from 2016 to 2018, in the interest of Nigerians.

Gbajabiamila noted that borrowing to finance infrastructural projects will pull Nigeria out of recession.

According to a statement issued on Saturday by his media aide, Olanrewaju Smart, Gbajabiamila said this during a grassroots empowerment programme in Lagos where he donated equipment to his constituents.

According to him, the House is looking into possible means of funding the projects in the 2016 budget, especially the borrowing plan of the Federal Government.

He also said the House was working hard to ensure that saboteurs did not hijack the anti-corruption drive of President Buhari.

Gbajabiamila noted that although some persons had condemned the Federal Government for blaming the economic recession on the past government, reference must be made to the source of the problem.

Gbajabiamiala said, “Borrowing to finance infrastructural projects is not an irresponsible act; Lagos State did the same and the development witnessed in the state is obvious.

“The House of Representatives will respond to Mr. President’s requests in the interest of Nigerians and quickly set the process in motion for its committees to carry out appropriate oversight functions on all project executing agencies until the 2016 budget is fully implemented according to law.”

Source: http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/299bn-loanll-rescue-nigeria-from.html

cc; lalasticlala

1 Like

Politics / Re: Popular Nigerian Gay Activist Weds Lover by Joyloaded: 9:19am On Nov 06, 2016
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Politics / Popular Nigerian Gay Activist Weds Lover by Joyloaded: 9:18am On Nov 06, 2016
Popular United Kingdom-based Nigerian gay and LGBT rights activist, Bisi Alimi, has married his British lover, Anthony.

The two lovers, who have been dating for some years, got married on Saturday in England.

Alimi, who expressed his excitement on social media, said, “In the presence of friends and family from around the world, Anthony and I will say ‘I Do’. But we remember places in the world where love is (a) crime.”

The rights activist posted the message on his Twitter handle on Saturday, displaying a picture of him and Anthony.

“Congratulations to @bisialimi, gay rights activist, public speaker, blog writer & HIV/LGBT advocate, on his marriage to Anthony! #LoveWins,” one Kevin Maxwell wrote in reply to Alimi’s tweet.

Prior to the wedding, Alimi had also shared pictures of his ‘Bachelors’ party’ on social media.

“When your wife has arrived for your wedding, then you know the party is about to start. Bring it on,” he wrote on his Facebook post on Friday.

In Nigeria, a law against same-sex relationship/marriage stipulates a 14-year jail term for offenders.

Source: http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/popular-nigerian-gay-activist-weds-lover.html

cc; lalasticlala

Crime / Re: I Would Have Become Kogi’s CSO If Audu Hadn’t Died–millionaire Robbery - Suspect by Joyloaded: 11:15am On Nov 05, 2016
delzbaba:
Wow,this guy is a criminal to the core.

Baddest Criminal
Celebrities / My Skit Stopped A Lady From Committing Suicide – Comedian Emma Oh My God by Joyloaded: 11:10am On Nov 05, 2016
Emmanuel Edunjobi aka Emma Oh My God, a comedian, has over 200,000 followers on Instagram while his YouTube channel and Facebook entertain thousands of viewers per post. The comic act tells Ademola Olonilua how he has been able to achieve the feat

Why do you infuse music in most of your posts on social media?

It is because of what I do which is called ‘musicomedy.’ It is a combination of music and comedy. I love music and comedy a lot and I do them very well and that is why I infuse both of them together. Most times when I hear some songs, somehow, another version just gets replayed in my head. The song automatically gets remixed in my head and the version could be in any of my favourite genres like fuji or highlife.

I just like to interpret songs in my favourite genre. I think being a creative mind is about recreating things every now and then. People like it when I do that because it comes out in a way they never imagined. However, this does not happen with every song I listen to but there are some songs that I just listen to and they change in my head.

You also use musical instruments for your skits. How did you learn how to use the various tools?

It is something I grew up with. I started playing different musical instruments since I was about seven years old. Once I am around any musical instrument, just give me a few days and I would have mastered it. I taught myself how to play every instrument that I use. I think it is a natural talent that was given to me by God.

I learnt everything on my own. For instance, I just bought the talking drum this year and I learnt how to play it after a week and that is because I did not have time to sit down and learn it as fast as I would have loved to. I recently bought a bata drum and by the next day, I was already playing it well, I even did a skit with it. It depends on the complexity of the instrument and the time I have to learn how to play it. I always find my way around musical instruments.

So why didn’t you become a musician?

I am working on my music right now and I just released a song. Doing ‘musicomedy’ is part of my strategy because it is making people realise that I can also do music. Over time, people have been advising me to delve into music. I am at a place where people know I can do music. I just released a song titled ‘Marry me.’

Are you aware that you have a strong presence on social media?

People tell me that, so I am beginning to believe. I am very active on Instagram, Facebook and YouTube. I make money from YouTube and that is why I am very active on that platform. Primarily, I am more active on Instagram because that is where I post most of my videos but I link the videos to my Facebook page.

How do you make money from YouTube?

YouTube pays you via adsense. It also pays per view. They have their rates and the way they pay people.

How lucrative has it been for you?

It has not been bad at all but I am focused on other things, so I am not paid as much as I would have been if it was my main job. For instance, if I was focused on my YouTube channel, I would have been getting more content and more view. The more view you get, the more money you make. You can make a lot of money and it can even be your major source of income. However, it is not the only thing I do but it is a source of income for me.

When you created your social media accounts, was it with the mindset of becoming popular?

I created the accounts to express myself and not to be popular. I opened the accounts with the hope of having a platform where people would see my creativity and that is the most important thing. It could be frustrating when you do some quality things and nobody gets to see them or appreciate them. Also, when you ask people for a platform, they turn you down. So, it was with the mindset that people would finally get to see what I have to offer. I thank God that it has been successful so far.

Which of your posts shot you to online stardom?

It was definitely a skit I did about Nigerian girls’ response to Davido’s song, ‘Aye.’ When I released the skit, it went viral. Apparently, people had not seen anything like that before and they did not expect it. That made some people to follow me on social media. From then on, I became consistent. It is one thing for people to notice your presence online but you need to show them that it was not a fluke; that you actually have something to offer. Recently, I have not had enough time to upload some content on Instagram because I have been on tour abroad as I also do stand-up comedy. I have had a lot going for me in terms of shows and tours but I have noticed the difference between when I post things regularly and when I don’t. If you do not post skits for a while, the followership reduces and people begin to follow other consistent internet comedians. You need to keep re-inventing yourself and come up with different skits.

How do you come up with your ideas?

It may sound cliché but I tell people that it is the work of God because the ideas come to me as fully conceptualised ideas; all I need to do is bring them into reality. I thank God that I have all it takes to make it a reality by myself because I can do everything by myself. I can produce; edit both the audio and visuals myself. Most times, it is the actualisation of the ideas that becomes a problem for people because when they have an idea, they go to meet cameramen and they are charged a lot of money. This could dampen a person’s spirit. Sometimes, I make it a conscious effort to develop the content from the scratch. But 80 per cent of what I do come to me as a whole.

Have your activities on social media opened doors for you in any way?

Definitely, all my trips abroad have been from social media. It has been a major source of publicity for me in such a way that people know what I can do. In terms of the skits, I have been making content for corporate bodies and even celebrities call me to feature on their videos. There was a wedding I anchored last year in Dubai and the people that invited me did so because they had seen my work on social media. I still have some events lined up, a lot of jobs, and they are courtesy of social media. Sometimes when I post things and people comment that I am jobless, I just laugh and say that if only they had an idea of what they are talking about.

Would you say that your activities on social media have impacted on the lives of your audience?

I put smiles on people’s faces every day and I know this for a fact because people send me messages every day. A lady once sent me a message that she cancelled her plan to commit suicide after watching my video which told her she had a reason to smile. When I get those messages, they make me happy. I once got a message from the Chief Executive Officer of a company who told me that despite his seriousness, all what his employees needed to make a request from him is to show him my video. I have become the favourite of a lot of people and there are some CEOs that must call me whenever they have an event. I have also made people realise that there is nothing that is not achievable. There are a lot of people that want to do what I am doing now but it all began and stopped in their head because they felt it could not be done but now that they are seeing me doing it, I have given them hope. A lot of people send me messages that I inspire them and I encourage them when they send me such messages. It is a form of networking because a lot of people I have worked with, I met them on social media. It bridges the gap. Most of the popular online comedians like Aphricanape, Craze lown and the likes, we first met on Instagram but when you see us, you would think we were childhood friends. It has been mutually beneficial for me and those watching me.

Are you saying that there are no disadvantages in being popular on social media?

There are and it is either you are prepared for them before you become popular or you learn to develop a thick skin as time goes on. A lot of people are out to bring you down on social media. I have done some videos where I got over 50,000 comments with everybody telling me that it is nice only for one person to come and give me a very nasty negative comment. Initially, it used to get to me but over time, I realised that those people just want attention. They are sad people who just want to affect you with their sadness. What I try to do is see if I can help the person become happy and if I cannot then, I would move on.

Also, you have to be careful with every step that you take because a lot of eyes are on you. Things that you would have done normally that nobody would notice can’t be done anymore. You have to calculate every step you take. You have to make a conscious effort to keep your private affairs very private because everything could become public. There are a lot of down side to being popular on social media.

How have you been coping with ladies?

I have been getting attention from ladies since I was a young boy. Women easily get attracted to me. During my school days, they were attracted to me because I was a very brilliant guy. In the university, I was very popular because of comedy and in church, I was an instrumentalist. All these draw ladies to me. During my NYSC days in Lagos, I won an award in a music competition. In fact, when I go somewhere and I don’t get attention from ladies, I feel abnormal because that is not the norm for me. Growing up with that background, I have learnt how to handle the situation and that is why there has been no scandal.

Has there been any time you wanted to quit social media?

No because the goodies I get from it are more than the bad that could come from it. I am gaining a lot from it.

Besides posting comedy skits, what else do you do with your social media platform?

People strike deals with me for their adverts or post on my page. I do content production for companies; sometimes my face does not appear on such jobs because I would be the script writer or content provider. I can say I get endorsement from some companies, brands and organisations. It is a business platform for me that has evolved from just posting skits and videos.

Source: http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/my-skit-stopped-lady-from-committing.html

cc; lalasticlala

Crime / I Would Have Become Kogi’s CSO If Audu Hadn’t Died–millionaire Robbery - Suspect by Joyloaded: 10:23am On Nov 05, 2016
At 30, Zakeri Isiaka is a millionaire and a frightening one. In political circles in Kogi State, Saturday PUNCH learnt that a mere mention of his name sends shivers down the spines of those who are familiar with his activities.

To Kogi State indigenes, Isiaka is a dreaded political thug, who killed at will. To the police, he is a combination of a daring robber and killer but to his family, he is the husband to nine wives and a father to 15 children. But the negative descriptions are all inaccurate, according to Isiaka’s statement to the police. He said he was a freedom fighter “out to rescue Kogi State from the clutches of evil men controlling the affairs of the state.”

Asked about a number of killings which he allegedly carried out in Kogi State, Isiaka said those he was accused of killing were his political foes and criminals who were after his life.

According to a source, he got on the radar of the police when he allegedly led a gang that attacked operatives of the Inspector-General of Police Response Team in July 2016 and snatched a rifle from them.




But on October 23, a three-month operation to track him down paid off when members of the IRT cornered him on the Okene–Akure Expressway and apprehended him while he was on his way to Akure, Ondo State.

He was transferred to the Force Headquarters, Abuja, where he promptly gave a detailed account of his operations, which spanned several states.

A police source told Saturday PUNCH that Isiaka’s gang were responsible for many cases of kidnaps and robberies in Kogi and other North Central states.

When Isiaka was arrested, the police recovered 15 rifles along with several magazines and ammunition from him. One of the guns was the one his gang allegedly snatched from the IRT.

Saturday PUNCH learnt that the day the gang snatched the gun, operatives of the IRT were in the state to rescue a kidnap victim, Edward Amedu, being held in a forest camp by Isiaka’s men.

When the gang sighted the police team, he was said to have ordered his men to open fire on their approaching vehicle.

The police source said that in the process, two operatives of the IRT sustained bullet wounds. At the end of the operation, the IRT had lost a rifle to Isiaka’s team.

Two of his men were said to have been arrested at the time of the operation. They later led the police to where the victim was rescued.

Isiaka, a native of Odu-Ochelle in Dekina Local Government Area of Kogi State, allegedly started off as a robber before joining militants in the Niger Delta and later became a political thug, who at a point, took control of his entire local government area.

Isiaka said he was once a farmer, who laboured for eight years till he could no longer endure the suffering and travelled to Port Harcourt, Rivers State, where he joined the group of militant leader, Ateke Tom.

He said, “I dropped out of secondary school and had nothing else to do but to go into farming at Iseyin, Oyo State. I did that till I went to Port Harcourt and started living with a young man. One day, I went to a joint where I normally smoked Indian hemp and saw some men discussing there. I realised they were militants involved in oil theft.

“I approached them and told them I was interested in joining them. They gave me the beating of my life. They accused me of being an informant. I was beaten for almost one week before one of them, who said he was one of Ateke Tom’s boys, finally said I could join them.

“He taught me how to handle guns and we burst many pipelines together. I was making almost N3m in each operation. After making enough money, I moved to Abuja and built a house. I bought some cars and started a car dealership. When I left the creeks, I came back with three guns, which I took to my village in Kogi.

“The sitting governor of Kogi State at the time, had given guns to thugs in the state. Because these same thugs killed my blood brothers during a disagreement, I had to keep the guns in Kogi so that I could use them to protect myself.”

Isiaka said during the 2011 governorship election in Kogi State between Idris Wada and Prince Abubakar Audu, he went home to “protect” the votes of his people.

According to him, the guns he brought back from the Niger Delta came in handy. He said despite this, one of his friends was killed during the election.

The suspect said, “After that election, I came back to Abuja and continued my business. I am a kind man, I even bought motorcycles for people as gifts. I first married three wives.

“Before the 2015 election, thugs of the Peoples Democratic Party and All Progressives Congress had a clash. I had to come back home and fight on the side of the APC. That was when the APC knew that I had become a powerful person. They realised they needed me.

“During the presidential election, Prince Audu gave me N30m to work for his party. But my younger brother, Farouk, was killed by PDP thugs in front of my father. He was picked up in his room where he slept beside his wife. They killed him and took his body away.

“When it was time for the governorship election, Prince Audu called me again and mobilised me with N20m and promised that he would make me the Chief Security Officer of the state if he won.

“He said he would make me Kogi’s youth leader and I would even be in charge of collecting revenue on farm produce in the state.

“My boys and I worked very hard. I was almost killed when I was ambushed by a PDP thug. So, I would have become the state’s CSO if Prince Audu had not died.”

Isiaka claimed that when Governor Yahaya Bello assumed office, he had made overtures to him, indicating that he could be useful to his government but got no reply.

According to him, some individuals might have scuttled his chances because of his closeness to the late Audu.

Isiaka said, “The people I fought were PDP thugs, who wanted to kill me and since APC came into power I have called on all my boys who are into armed robbery to stop because I have repented.

“Few weeks before the last governorship election, I communicated with some of my boys from Okene, who used to rob in my area. I advised them to quit because I discovered that the people of Kogi State wanted change and they were accepting what I was telling them. I knew that if APC won, my boys and I would enjoy.

“But they refused, so, I tricked them. I told them that I had a job for them and when they came to my town, I took them to a hotel. While they were inside, my boys went to where they parked their operational vehicle and stole all their guns.

“I control all the APC thugs in Kogi State and since I repented, I have been seriously against crime. Any of my boys who got involved in kidnapping, I personally arrested and handed over to the police but in most cases the police would release them after collecting money.

The police in Kogi State can confirm this. After all I did, the state governor (Bello) did not appreciate my efforts. He believes that I am still in support of Prince Audu’s son, Mohammed, but that is not true. My loyalty is to APC.”

Speaking about some of the robbery operations he was involved in, Isiaka said few weeks before the governorship election in Kogi in 2015, he and his gang robbed a vehicle carrying a huge amount of money in Abuja. He said he made over N50m from the operation and that he narrowly escaped death as one of his gang members attempted to kill him.

According to him, one Dan brought the job to him.

“He told me that some politicians were moving money around Abuja and it seemed that the money was meant for election. We planned our operation and we ambushed the driver and snatched the vehicle.

“After the operation, I kept three Ghana-Must-Go bags for myself and I gave Dan and others involved two bags to share. But while we were sharing the money, Dan, who had a gun with him, wanted to shoot me. He ended up shooting himself.”

The suspect said in another operation in Okene, Kogi State, his gang made N10m.

He said he lost seven of his rifles to the police in Niger State after they arrested his younger brother, who gave one of his guns to a friend. The friend then used it to snatch a car.

According to Isiaka, he gave the guns to his manager for safe-keeping but said when he was away for the election, his younger brother decided to rent out one of the guns to his friend.

“When my brother and his friend were arrested, he led the police to my car stand in Abuja where police seized all the vehicles in it and they also carried away my seven rifles.”

Despite his situation, Isiaka has a word of advice to the government on how to curtail crime.

He said amnesty should be offered to anyone carrying a gun in the state, saying that there are too many guns on the loose.

Source: http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/i-would-have-become-kogis-cso-if-audu.html

cc; lalasticlala

Romance / Re: What Can Hurt Your Sex Life (1) by Joyloaded: 6:50am On Nov 05, 2016
Take Note Of This!
Culture / Oba Dosunmu: I Refused To Do Any Ritual Before Wearing The Crown by Joyloaded: 6:43am On Nov 05, 2016
Oba Olusanya Adegboyega Dosunmu, the Olowu of Owu Kingdom, Abeokuta, Ogun State, tells ‘NONYE BEN-NWANKWO about his throne and how he combines it with being a pastor

Your great grandfather was an Oba…

Yes, but his kingdom was not in Abeokuta. He was the second to the last Oba in our last homestead. He died in 1817. The war started around 1819 and went on till about 1825/26. We left our homestead and dispersed to the east, west, north and south. Most of us settled at Ijebu. The main stock, with all the paraphernalia and culture, came to Abeokuta. Where we were before the war was at Ibadan. Fifty per cent of Ibadan belong to Owu. We have so many families there. Even the area they call ‘Gate’ in Ibadan, when you look at that place, you will not see any gate there now. The gate they talk about is actually the one Owu built many years ago.

The Owu in Osun State, are they your descent as well?



My own great, great grandfather was Olowu and we all ended up in Abeokuta. We were persuaded to stay in Abeokuta with the Egbas.

Did you ever envisage that you would one day become the traditional ruler?

If I say it didn’t occur to me, I would be lying. Every son of a king dreams that he would become king one day.

There are so many eminent personalities in Owu including the former President Olusegun Obasanjo, do they pay homage to you and respect you as the traditional ruler or do they see you as their mate?

This is a very interesting question. The thing that first shocked me when I was crowned was that my friends would come to the palace and they would be behaving as if they were crazy. I thought they would come and greet me in the usual manner of backslapping and exchanging banter like we used to do. They would just sit quietly. Ah! I would ask them why they were behaving that way. I would tell them I was still Sanya and they would say I am not just Sanya, I am Olowu as well. I would ask them why they were idolizing me. They would tell me that it I was real and it was not an act, they would remind me that I was real Oba. I would appeal to them that when we are on our own, we should continue with the way we used to behave and stop all the formalities. But 11 years on the throne, if they had yielded to my own fancy, I would have blamed myself. This culture is important. You should give respect to those whom respect is due.

Talking about culture, are there traditions and taboos you used your powers as the king to abrogate?

There are. But then, I think as a growing race, we must accept and allow some new ideas to come in. One thing we must not let go is the cultural discipline that we have. Education is another subject that can be harnessed by culture. The culture of learning must not be allowed to go haywire. That you have this and that exposure doesn’t mean that you should not give honour to whom honour is due. If you fail to relate with our surroundings, we will not be able to develop that background and culture that we have. We cannot understand them anymore, not even to the point of developing them. It is what we have that we would use to make progress. I am not saying we should keep to the old style of living, I am not saying the old style is useless either. You can only sit down as an enlightened person and try and reinvent things. We must not jettison our culture but we must know it so thoroughly that we can do anything we like with it to the point of making it to progress.

It is widely believed that an Oba must have passed through so many rituals and initiations before and after being crowned, did you pass through any?

I refused to go through any ritual because that would have been anti-progressive.

So how did you decide that?

I was born and raised and brought up in the periphery of the palace. My father was not an Oba but he acted as an Oba in the absence of an uncle who passed on. My father was called to become an Olowu and he said never!

But what was his real excuse for not wanting to be an Oba?

He said he was a Christian. I looked at my father and I saw him as a progressive man in those days. It was around 1946/49. He was the regent.

And why did you decide to become an Oba since you are not only a Christian but also a pastor?

Enlightenment and exposure has shown me that even if you become a king, even the crown you would wear would have to be sanctified. But what is the meaning of sanctification, is it not to make pure? I wouldn’t want to use another meaning like ‘to make holy’. For me, whilst I wasn’t against anybody’s sanctification, I wanted the proper sanctification that would make my cap wearable. I am not condemning the method they are using. If my cap is not as wide as it is now, how would I have been able to put it on my head? What was plausible for me was to buy a cap that was my size and put it on. That is a completely different form of thinking than the one my father had. A crown that was the exact size of his head was made for him, so what stopped him from wearing it? Apparently, he didn’t want to have headache.

So what you are saying is that the rituals weren’t for you and none was performed on you…

I have seen it all. My uncle was an Olowu after my father died. My elder brother was an Olowu after my father died. My cousins at one point had become Olowu. The closer they got, the more understanding I had about the responsibilities and duties of being the head of a community. I have become educated and enlightened. My exposure had been in the performing arts. I didn’t read Economics or Accountancy. I read something that could link me up with our culture; the traditional practices of my people. I have been born into this royal family. I have seen some of these practices you are talking about and I have had the opportunity of examining them critically as an enlightened person to see that this concoction which they put inside the crown may be a hindrance to my proper thinking. I just made a decision that I would not have such inside the cap I would wear. I asked them (kingmakers) what the concoction in the cap was supposed to do for me. Shouldn’t I have asked them? Fortunately for me, I was older than the people in the traditional setup that were supposed to be performing this traditional whatever on me. I spent a whole night, nearly 10 hours, talking with them. I told them I wanted to do what they asked me to do but they would need to explain to my why I should do it. After the discussion, we came to agreement that I could do it another way and it would work. There was a time I had a little wound on my leg and a medical doctor came to treat me. Three days after, he said I should take the bandage off my leg. I agreed. He gave me a small powder and said I should be putting it on the wound. I asked him what the powder was for. He said it would protect the wound from being contaminated. So I took the powder and I was putting it on the wound. That was a ritual. A ritual is a practice you do from time to time so that something bad will not happen to you. Of course, if my chiefs gathered and I started insulting them and told them to get out, I would have deprived myself of getting their advice. But if my chiefs tell me that it was because I didn’t perform a ritual that made me to have cough, why would I take them seriously?

But did they pressurise you to perform any ritual?

When the government had approved my candidacy, Chief Gbenga Daniel who was the governor then asked me if I would go to the palace to perform the ritual of staying in the palace for 90 days in seclusion. I said I would. He said he thought I was a pastor. I asked him what that had got to do with my being in the palace under seclusion for 90 days. He said it was because of the rituals they would need to perform. I asked him what rituals meant. Ritual is something you do regularly so that something does not happen to you. It is ritualistic to go to bed in the night and wake up the next morning. Look at your dictionary and check the meaning of ritual. He said that wasn’t the kind of rituals he meant. He said he was talking about the one they would need to put marks on my head and do this and that. I said it wasn’t a problem but I would still need to ask them why they would need to perform such on me. If you are going to dress me up, I would need to look at what you are wearing. If you are wearing rags, I wouldn’t allow you to dress me up. If somebody wanted me to do a ritual, I would need to ask questions and ask why they would want me to do it that particular way they are talking about. So I told him I would go to the palace and I wasn’t going to throw anybody away. I had a few things going for me. I didn’t do the rituals and not because I was a Christian, no. Christianity has its own rituals. In my house, between the hours of 1am and 3am, I and my wife would get up and pray. Is it not ritual?

The kingmakers came to my house around 1am one night. They knocked and they said they were the ritual kingmakers. I invited them in. I didn’t have to condemn them, that was what they knew. What I know is different from theirs; my exposure is different. I believed they could benefit from my exposure and that was why I went and said I would be in the seclusion of the palace for three months, alone from 8pm to 8am the next day. Nobody was supposed to come there. I even saw it as a good time for me to pray. I had been praying from 1am to 3am long before I became an Oba. Then I would read my bible. There should really be a time you detach yourself and stay on your own.

So the seclusion didn’t bother you?

Of course it didn’t bother me. So when the kingmakers came that night, they thought I wasn’t going to allow them inside the house. But the palace is not my house. If somebody knocks on my door at such a time in my personal home, I would tell the person to go back. But the palace is the house of the public and I have chosen to live there. Anyway, the men came in and I greeted them. They sat down. I wouldn’t need to tell you what we discussed because that is irrelevant. But we exchanged ideas. I started asking them about their culture and the thing they wanted to do. They told me. I told them about my own belief. They said that was my own belief but they were there to perform certain things on me. I said who? Me? I told them it wasn’t going to happen. I told them I would need to explain to them why it shouldn’t happen. I told them and somehow, I think they were persuaded. They said if I wasn’t going to do it their way, I should buy it with money. I refused. I told them they wouldn’t perform anything on me and that was that. Around 5am, I told them they would need to leave if they didn’t want people to see them. But I also told them they could still have breakfast with me if they didn’t mind. They said they weren’t hungry but I would have to give them money. So I told them that all their powers could be bought with money but the one I was telling them which is the power from God, could never be bought with money.

Are there challenges that come with being an Oba?

There are so many challenges. I have endless challenges. People are hungry. There is no day I don’t spend between an average of N1, 000 to N100, 000 every day. When people are sick, before they go to the hospital, they come to Oba’s palace. But God will always keep His promise to anybody who follows Him. I am a pastor and I try to follow His ways.

Even as a pastor, some people believe that as a king, you should have more than one wife…

Already, four women had children for me under circumstances that are not polygamous. I married my first wife when she was 23. Before she died, she had given me seven children. My kids were very young then. I didn’t even have time for the kids then. All the time she was alive, I didn’t know any of my children fell sick. She was a nurse at the Railway Hospital.

Anyway, I met another lady in Abeokuta here, the daughter of a judge and we spoke and I told her about marriage. How can you marry a woman and tell her that you don’t want children? So I didn’t succeed with her. She had two children for me, but she was brought up in England. What I thought I would get was not possible. I thought I would get a baby care nurse. That was my idea of marriage the second time, and she asked me if I thought she came to be a nurse. The next thing I saw was that she packed her things and went back to England.

So, I met another woman, and before I could say Jack Robinson, she had a set of twins. I told her we should get married but she said no. She said she didn’t like marriage. I had never heard a woman speak like that all my life. So she couldn’t marry me.

I eventually met my current wife. She had lost her husband and I had lost my wife. We met at a crusade. She’s almost like a pastor. I asked if she could marry me, and she said yes but she had two children. Just two? while I had nine. I asked why she didn’t remarry and she said since she already had two children, she didn’t plan to have more. I asked if she could marry me, and she said we should pray about it. So, we started praying.

So, I’ve been married four times, but never a polygamist. It was either they died or they left me, until this fourth one who has stayed with me for 35 years, and she has taken care of all the children like hers. There is no difference. I’ve adopted her two children and she has adopted mine.

How was growing up

My family house was the house of the mother of my grandfather. She was from an outstanding family. I didn’t meet my grandfather; he died about eight years before I was born. But I met the paraphernalia of Oba. We had a room where all the stuff he used were kept. Each time my parents weren’t around, we would go into the room and acted plays in that room and we would act as Oba and we would wear one of the crowns on our head. So if you would ask if I had dreamt of becoming an Oba, I would say yes because I acted as an Oba during those days we were very young.

So your love for acting didn’t start today?

No. I was young then. But it is a natural thing for children to act plays. But when we got to secondary school, we stopped thinking of becoming Oba. We saw our brothers who were accountants, administrators and other professionals. We just dreamt of becoming something else.

And what was your dream?

My dream was the stage. I didn’t have any help to go to the university. University education wasn’t free. But then, everybody my age in those days dreamt of going abroad for the Golden Fleece. Anyway, I gave up the idea of going abroad too soon because I realised that I would still need money to travel.

And what did you do then?

I started taking correspondence courses. I got advance level of GCE. But then, some of my mates had graduated from the university. In those days, we struggled to be educated because if you weren’t educated, you wouldn’t go anywhere. Even as I didn’t go to the university, I struggled to take the correspondence courses. I eventually got a job in a broadcasting house.

Did you like the job?

That was my dream! I wanted to be a broadcaster, a reporter. I once worked in Daily Times before I worked in a broadcasting house. One day, the director general called me and told me about an opening. He said BBC wanted to recruit Africans and train them abroad. I jumped at it. That was how I got the opportunity of being sent abroad to study. I worked for the BBC that recruited us. But then, when I told my aunt that I was going to England to study, she was ecstatic! She asked me what I was going to study, I didn’t know what to say. I didn’t know how to say ‘Drama’. How would I explain ‘drama’ to her in Yoruba? Well, I had to tell her ‘Ere’. She screamed! She said that so I actually wanted to go to England to learn how to ‘play’. She asked me if I needed to learn how to play. She asked why I couldn’t study what my elder brothers studied. She said, ‘ your brothers studied ‘ accountant’ , ‘ doctor’, ‘ lawyer’, and you want to go and study how to play.’ She was my mother’s best friend. My mother was late then. Tears were streaming down her eyes. At a point, she felt I was lying because she didn’t think I could go to England to study ‘Ere’. I was so sad. The next day, she marched me to my cousin’s house. He was an accountant. She told him to talk to me so I would get back to my senses. But my cousin knew what I was going to do and he explained to her. She understood but said she would still have preferred me to study a ‘reasonable’ course.

When did you come back?

I came back in 1967 and the same man, Christopher Kolade, who helped me go abroad, also employed me. I was so mad with the so-called Nigerian Television Service. I wasn’t happy with the percentages of the programmes on TV. Eighty five per cent were foreign programmes like Hawaii 05. Fifteen per cent was for news. We had two or three per cent of local content. Kolade said I was free to do whatever I could. I asked for all the files that had to do with programmes. So I started working on local ideas for programmes. I met great producers including the late Art Alade and others. Within a year, we changed things around. Gradually, we went from 60 per cent Nigerian programmes against 40 per cent.

When did the idea of Village Headmaster come on board?

As I was going through the files and studying them, I came across this goldmine. I read it and my eyes popped out. I went to late Segun Olusola who was the first Nigerian producer of television programmes. He was the controller of programmes then. I told him we would have a long lasting drama series on TV. He cautioned me. He said he knew I could be mad and he wouldn’t stop me from being mad. But he said I shouldn’t be crazy. I wondered what the difference between madness and craze was. He told me there was no money to do this ‘great’ idea. I had to go and tell the director what happened between me and Segun. He actually said Segun was saying the truth. But he agreed we could give it a go-ahead. He said I shouldn’t worry about the money. He said when we got to the bridge, we would cross it. That was how Village Headmaster came to be.

Was it planned that some of the cast of Village Headmaster ended up becoming Obas?

You are very right. It is really amazing! We never talked about who we were or where we came from. I would have told them I was the grandson of Olowu. About six of us were princes but we didn’t talk about it. The only one who has yet to become Oba is Dejumo Lewis. He is a bundle of talent.


http://punchng.com/refused-ritual-wearing-crown-oba-dosunmu-olowu-owu/

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Romance / What Can Hurt Your Sex Life (1) by Joyloaded: 6:36am On Nov 05, 2016
Funmi Akingbade

Many of our readers have been sending countless questions to us wanting to know if there are other things that can hurt their sex life apart from bad addictive habits and some common illnesses that have been mentioned on this platform.

Do you know that being mere can hurt a couple’s sex life? As simple as being over excited may look or appear, when married couples are not very mindful of this act, they are unknowingly destroying their sex bed. I am sure many of our readers may think this is not so. But do you know that sometimes, when men are overexcited about having sex, they totally forget about the needs of their wives. And what happens is that, during sex, the husband clumsily squeezes the wife’s breast.

The point is that during intercourse, the wife is not warmed up and therefore does not enjoy sex as much as the husband. This action hurts couple’s sex life and before you know it, the unsatisfied partner is either not showing interest any more or looking for sex elsewhere. So, husbands, go down on your wife like you mean it! If you want her to enjoy sex, then you neted to enjoy performing MouthAction on her. Just like nothing is sexier to many husbands than wives giving them a Mouth Action, nothing is sexier to many wives than a husband who enjoys giving oral pleasure. Documentation shows that only about 25 to 30 per cent of married women orgasm or reach climax through sex and most of these women need and likely want clitoral stimulation in addition to sex. I tell men that when you are through, still go down on your wife. You will be surprised to see another side of her, try it tonight. When you roll over after sex and tell her, ‘sorry dear, it’s just too hot, or I am so tired from office work, or don’t worry, next time I will make out time, then you keep a foot of distance between you and her. Maybe you chat with her a bit before falling asleep. She is noticeable annoyed and it will backfire sooner or later. Even if you are not someone who likes to touch after sex, you just must learn how to. You can start off small and make some kind of physical contact a normal part of your after-sex routine. Scratch her back for a little while and lay a little closer than normal. Once you have scratched her back for a while, move to a closer touch. Cuddling after sex will bring the two of you closer together. One of the most successful marriage relationships has been linked to bonds created after sex and cuddling. According to research, the way you approach your partner after sex is really important to how you approach your relationship in general. When you and your wife barely experience spark after sex, it could hurt your sex life.



Another thing that can hurt couple’s sex life is when they fail to identify their own specific style of sexual satisfaction. Please note that not every style, every fantasy, every erotic manual works for every couple. Each couple must recognise and enhance what works best for their sex life. Failure to do this will either put your partner in a state of pretence, compromising, tricks, fabrications and lies or loss of interest in sex. Many married couples are under the false mirage that every other couple seem to be climaxing and having orgasms all the time from whatever type of sex they’re having. Well, when you are fed with such diet by watching porn stars and when your real life doesn’t match, you think maybe something is wrong with you or your spouse.

Real-life sex can almost never measure up to the passion portrayed on the screen, such people don’t talk about the fact that it’s likely that in an odd position, you’ll pass gas or the love of your life will take you in his arms and have bad breath. Sex in the real world isn’t perfect and it doesn’t always end with an earth-shattering climax. But it doesn’t have to end up with a graveyard experience either. Good sex doesn’t necessarily have to be about an orgasm. It can just be an emotionally fulfilling experience between committed couple, who have discovered their unique style and taste, and are most comfortable with such. Couples also need to understand that even when everything else in the relationship is working, sexual styles aren’t always compatible. Most wives like long pre-intimacy sessions. Most husbands are ready to go in an instant. Some partners long for wet, sensual kisses. While others prefer dry, chaste pecks. Sex may not just be naturally perfect. There is the energy of a new relationship of the couple or distance spouse that everything about such sex is very passionate and highly erotic; talk about the excitement, the eagerness but it has its negative side which is that most times, spouses bump noses or knees or you are just very clumsy about some stuff because you just haven’t learned how to dance together yet.

But even long-term couples can struggle in the bedroom also. Though we can easily tell our partner what underwear we’d like him or her to wear, or what we’d like to cook together for dinner, but these same long time couples tend to get tongue-tied when it comes to the topic of sex and maybe some new ideas. Couples sometimes tend to be very sensitive when it comes to talking about sex. They’re afraid of hurting their partner’s feelings, so they don’t tell them what they like or don’t like. But you’re not going to get it unless you ask for it.

Questions

Is it normal to rub her feet and not her back?

My wife’s way of really having the best of pre-intimacy and sex must include massaging her feet. If I want to get the best of sex from my wife, she will always suggest I rub her feet alongside rubbing other parts of her body. Even when I have done justice to her breasts, nipples and clitoris, I must caress her feet. This worries me a bit, is it okay? Or are there spiritual implications to this action? Because the way it goes is that as soon as I begin rubbing her feet, she will be rubbing my head. I am beginning to wonder if she is not using this scene for juju. Please help me.

Jalade Josey

Well, Mr. Jalade, we are in times and age when couples are constantly being exposed to all forms of sexual awareness. The singular reason your wife will always advocate you rubbing her feet more and also including it in your pre-intimacy is simply because there are thousands of nerve endings in the human sole that stimulate the entire nervous system. What I perceive here is that maybe along your time of pre-intimacy, she has discovered that this simple act helps her to either be in the mood or stimulate her or help her to get into orgasm fast, hence she always requests for it. I do not think it has anything to do with juju or spiritual connotation. Her rubbing your head in return shows she is not only enjoying it, she is fully participating. And also for your information, that is a romantic way women appreciate their husbands. They rub the head more than any other part of the body. What I would suggest is get good lubricant and smear your hands with it. After softening your hands with massage oil, massage each foot, then slowly move up to calves. Massaging her muscles is also important if you desire to get her in the mood. Using the heels of your palms, apply pressure on her muscles. Ensure you roll your fingers back and forth while you move your hands up and down her muscles. Do not forget to pay attention to the top part of each muscles where it meets the bone, then go upwards to her tummy and breast and nipples. She will keep screaming for more.

Is this right?

I have been dating this guy for over seven years and he keeps on promising marriage and pleading with me to wait. My fear is that from all indications, he is not just ready for marriage because all the reasons he gave for delays have been sorted out, yet nothing is around the corner. On three different occasions, we chose date for the court wedding and on those occasions, he forgot outright. Do you think I should keep waiting?

Lady Queen Asofon

No!! Read in between the lines. Ideally speaking, courtship or dating is an avenue for two people who fancy each other and want to eventually end up married, to come together and see how compatible they are before they take the final step. But that isn’t always the case. Sometimes, you find that some men hide under the pretext of courtship to deceive and exploit unsuspecting innocent women. They see a good woman, promise her heaven, string her along for years, and then, eventually dump her when they are actually ready to get married; leaving the woman stranded, heartbroken and dejected. So, I feel that prolonged dating or courtship is overrated, and should be avoided by women who actually have plans of getting married.

I said this because from experience, I know that most men know where you fit in their life plans from the first time they see you. The first impression always matters; this is no lie. When you meet someone for the first time, you almost certainly leave that meeting with an impression of them, so most men have an idea of the type of woman you are (good or bad, slutty or decent) and whether or not you’ll fit into their future marriage plans from the first time they spend time with you. Of course, the first time wouldn’t be enough for him to understand your whole person, but it’ll be enough for him to make an assessment of you. When you meet a decent person, you know in an instant, so when some men say they want to court a woman for as long as seven years or more so they ‘know her very well’, I think it’s quite ridiculous, and nothing but an excuse to continue to string her along and use her as a free sex giver. Except there is no sexual involvement and there are genuine reasons for the delay, no man needs to be with you for many years before he can tell whether or not you’re his kind of woman.

The truth of the matter is, some men don’t want marriage, they want sex. More than half the population of men who get into a relationship do it solely for the sex, and not marriage or companionship as they tend to make most women believe. They know that some women are vulnerable and desire those things, they lie and give them the impression that they actually plan to get married to them in the near future, thus tying them down and stringing them along for as long as they find them sexually valuable. This is how most women have missed out on opportunities that could have led to something more real with genuine men.

Even when he says it’s because he wants to know you better, several years of dating is no guarantee you’ll really understand yourselves. The major purpose of dating and courtship is to learn and understand the type of person you plan on spending the rest of your life with. But then, you cannot dispute the fact that you may not be able to achieve that purpose successfully even if given 10 years, and the reason is simple; some people are very good at pretence. Some can hide their true personality away from you until after marriage, so you wouldn’t be able to tell what their flaws and inadequacies are during your dating period. So, the success of a marriage is not a product of how long you date each other.

Finally, I want to state categorically that successful marriages aren’t built on prolonged courtship or dating. It is instead a product of true love and how mentally mature both parties are for the experience called marriage. A man and woman who love each other very well, and know the importance of sacrifice in preserving a relationship do not need to court for years before they get married, because those are not values you learn together with another person, but by yourself. Marriage is about learning to love the imperfections of the person you feel strongly drawn to. It goes beyond sex or making children; it goes beyond hanging out. It is about friendship and companionship; so, ladies do not allow any man to turn you into a intimacy gadget that he’ll eventually dispose off when he gets tired. Be wary of men who want to keep you in a relationship for very long without showing any evident signs of changing because some of them have different interest from yours.

This is a true confession of an ex-masturbator

You’ve probably read many posts that told you that there is nothing wrong with jerking off. In fact, most people would tell you that you stand to gain more from engaging in the act than not. The truth remains that as ‘harmless’ as it seems, masturbation has the tendency to expose you to serious dangers, both physically and emotionally, like it did to me. Masturbation can ruin your relationship and marriage. When you masturbate too much, you get addicted to it over time; you tend to even like it more than real sex, thereby harming your sex life with your spouse. There’s also the possibility that your partner wouldn’t be comfortable with the thought that they’re seeing someone who prefers pleasing themselves than to be with them. It can hurt your social life. People who masturbate so much rarely spend time with other people. They’d rather be alone, as it affords them the opportunity to do whatever they want. And when they manage to mingle, they make abrupt exits. Masturbation can make your penis look awful. The more you masturbate, the more you subject your penis to stress, and over stretching, and that would cause it to have more veins on it and drops. Not too many women find a vein-filled dropping-skin penis attractive. It’s been medically proven, and there have been stories about men who suffer premature ejaculation because of excessive masturbation, like I did. Then as a woman, you risk getting infections when you masturbate. Due to the nature of the female organ, it’s easy for one to get an infection if the object or finger being inserted in there isn’t germ- free. If you masturbate as a virgin, you can lose your virginity. You don’t want to do that, trust me.

Source:http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/what-can-hurt-your-sex-life-1.html

cc; lalasticlala

Politics / Buhari Meets Saraki, Kwankwaso by Joyloaded: 6:29am On Nov 05, 2016
President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday met behind closed door with the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki.

He also met with a former Kano State Governor, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso.

Buhari met with the two senators separately in his office shortly after they joined him for Jumat prayers at the main mosque inside the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

Saraki was accompanied to the President’s office by Senator Danjuma Goje.


The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mahmud Mohammed, also attended the Friday prayers but left immediately after the prayers ended.

Saraki later told State House correspondents that it would not be right to politicise the matter by reducing the issues surrounding the Federal Government’s loan request to the relationship between the executive and the legislative.

He said, “I came here to pray. I have finished praying and I just had a general felicitation with the President. It did not go beyond that.

“We should not look at that (the loan request) as a reflection of the relationship between the executive and the legislature.

“Don’t let us politicise very important issues. As we said, this is work in progress.”

Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, had on Tuesday said Buhari’s request for $29.9bn foreign loan was rejected due to technical issues.

Briefing journalists shortly after plenary, Ndume, said he was shocked that the request suffered a setback and expressed optimism that the issues would be resolved and the request would be represented.

He said, “The problem came on a technical ground; it is supposed to go to the committee level and the committee is supposed to take a look at it.

“I am going to appeal to my colleagues to take a look at it again and see how we are going to bring it back.”

Source: http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/buhari-meets-saraki-kwankwaso.html

cc; lalasticlala

Crime / Re: Two Robbers Killed In Fierce Gun Battle With Police In Warri By Policemen by Joyloaded: 4:02am On Nov 04, 2016
ArabMopol:
the hustle is real... but how do the 3person escape something is not adding up here, Nigeria police can lie...

lol

1 Like

Crime / Re: Two Robbers Killed In Fierce Gun Battle With Police In Warri By Policemen by Joyloaded: 9:32pm On Nov 03, 2016
Mologi:
rest well ...... rude hustlers...

lol
Crime / Two Robbers Killed In Fierce Gun Battle With Police In Warri By Policemen by Joyloaded: 9:24pm On Nov 03, 2016
Two armed robbers were killed while one escaped after a shootout with the police in Warri, Delta State. The three suspects reportedly robbed their victim at gun point about 2:00pm Tuesday, November 1st and dispossessed of him of the sum of N300, 000, three handsets and other valuables before fleeing on a tricycle.
However, the victim sent a distress call to men of the anti-robbery squad, got into his car and traced the suspects to Agbassa junction, between Warri/Sapele road. The police gave the suspects a hot chase and a gun battle ensued which lead to the death of two of the suspects, while the third escaped.



A senior police source said one cut-to-size pistol, the tricycle used by the suspects, one live cartridge and two expended cartridges were recovered from the gang.

Source:Nigerian:- http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/two-robbers-killed-in-fierce-gun-battle.html

Politics / Question Of The Day: “who Do You Think Can Oppose President Buhari In 2019?” by Joyloaded: 5:42pm On Nov 03, 2016
2019 is fast approaching and we are trying to come up with personalities and names that we think can be a formidable opposition to President Buhari if he chooses to re-contest in 2019.

Coming out with an opposition is not easy. Some people thinks there is only one man that can oppose him; Goodluck jonathan.

Other names coming up are Saraki, Atiku Abubakar, Dino Melaye, David Mark, Rochas Okorocha, Fashola, Oshomole, Chris Okotie. e.t.c. It is as if we won’t be getting anything new comer in 2019.

So Who do you think can be a formidable opposition to President Buhari if he chooses to contest in 2019?

Drop your Comments.

Source:- www.naijahard.com/2016/11/question-of-day-who-do-you-think-can.html?m=1
Politics / Re: I’m Glad APC Has Accepted Responsibility For Its Failure – Fayose by Joyloaded: 4:28pm On Nov 03, 2016
Lilimax:
But Fayose is saying the truth.
Nothing is currently working in this nation except we're being distracted by EFCC 's
one sided probe on corrupt individuals embarassed

undecided

1 Like

Nairaland / General / 5 Reasons Never To Sign-up With Linda Ikeji's Social by Joyloaded: 4:26pm On Nov 03, 2016
This is just an expert ISP opinion by name TimiGate and I do not completely agree with some of the points pointed out here but will love to know what you think.


I’m pretty sure when you mention blogging in Nigeria, the first thing that will come to your mind is Lindaikeji. I admire her giant leap into doing new things but at this time, when preparation meet opportunity, an invention is born… but in her case, should we called this inadequate preparation or what?


Here are the 5 Reasons Extracted From TimiGate

1. The site is annoyingly slow!
02:08.16 That is the average time it takes for the home page to be displayed on LIS. 2 minutes and 8 seconds. Within this period, I was able to log on to facebook four times, youtube five times, Nairaland eight times. The most annoying part is that most of the times the site is inaccessible.

2. Security concern
Linda revealed that she contacted a web developer to start work on the development of LIS after having a meeting with two women. Well, it is a known fact that Linda unlike Mark Zuckerberg or Seun Osewa is not an IT professional. Why then would anyone want to trust her with sensitive information? The level of agreement entered into with the web developer is unknown. In event that there is a breach in contractual terms, users will surfer.


3. Followership
Except you are a celebrity, I don’t see how you will be able to amass 50000 followers on this platform. Why would 50k people follow you when you are not a celeb? Nigerian celebs are too comfortable on there high horses either to want to delve into the followership business of LIS. If you don’t have 50k followers, you don’t get a bite of the advertisement money. This is just a way of Linda saying sorry, I can’t share my money with you.

4. 1k per post
This is Linda saying Though I cant share my bread with you, you can still get the crumbs! Except you you want to do it because you have been doing it for free, I dont see how 1k can spur someone into writing lengthy posts and endangering his/her life by taking the pictures of armed police men taking bribes on the road. These is just a marketing strategy where it is announced world over that you can make money on LIS yet you cant find someone who has done such.

5. Nothing new
While Linda said it was born out of the need to bring Lindaikejisblog and facebook together on one platform, LIS has no new features that make her a substitute for facebook. While it is possible to make calls on facebook, it isn’t on LIS.

What do you think?

Source:- http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/5-reasons-never-to-sign-up-with-linda.html

Politics / I’m Glad APC Has Accepted Responsibility For Its Failure – Fayose by Joyloaded: 4:13pm On Nov 03, 2016
Ekiti State Governor has lashed out at the All Progressives Congress, APC-led Federal Government, saying nothing is working under the current administration.

The fiery governor made the remark while addressing reporters on Wednesday in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

Stressing that Nigeria needs more than political parties to forge ahead, Fayose said, “Every political party has got its own problems. Let me tell you, as the events unfold, there will be a way out of all these logjams.

“Nigerians need more than PDP [the Peoples Democratic Party] and APC [All Progressives Party] to move this country forward. APC has failed Nigerians and I’m glad that they came out to take responsibility for this failure.

“If PDP in 16 years could sustain the Naira to dollar exchange rate at ‎ 200 Naira and they have failed to sustain the Naira and we are now having about 500 Naira to one dollar in less than a year, it’s unfortunate.

“If you take a look at the events ‎in our country today, nothing works; no roads, no water, no light; the aviation sector is in trouble.”

On his persistent criticism of the APC-led Federal Government, Fayose said the government needs to hear the truth, stressing that Nigerians are unimpressed with the current state of the nation.

“This is not personal, they might not like my face but they need to hear this that they are not impressing Nigerians”.

Recall that the governor recently accused the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, of collaborating with APC, stressing that the votes of Nigerians no longer count.

Source:- http://www.naijahard.com/2016/11/im-glad-apc-has-accepted-responsibility.html

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