Kayharry's Posts
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#Throwback Photo of Buhari, Oyegun, others protesting on the streets on Nov. 19, 2014, where they accused INEC of working with the Presidential Villa to rig the 2015 elections...
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Kayharry:see that u drop this ur 5m shit on every auto ads |
Onemanonevote:u try but no |
Kayharry |
System0001:you are right but wrong. |
manual gear, engine is okay and come with aircondition but not cooling suspensión okay 07051017038 07035036313 Location ijaye ojokoro lagos
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Still on |
Still on |
Still on |
“I’m a community leader here. I watch over about eighty people. We meet every month, and I try to bring their concerns to the government. They also look to me for guidance on how to vote. Hardly any of them are educated. Most of us have nothing. I’m lucky because I work as a street cleaner, but my salary hasn’t been paid in three months. But if we try to feed ourselves by hawking articles on the side of the road, the government will put us in jail. We need jobs. We need clean water. We need good roads. The politicians promise these things before every election. They visit the neighborhood, and tell us this time it will be different. But after the election they disappear. I’ve been to the minister’s office so many times. Every time his receptionist tells me that he’s in a meeting. I sit there all day. The meeting never ends. But he’ll show up again when the election comes around, carrying eighty packages of noodles, and a polo shirt with his name on it.” Humanofny(Lagos, Nigeria)
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As it unfold |
“My uncle was an engineer. He’s the one that exposed me to reading. He’d get a book, finish it, and give it to me. By the time I was twenty I’d read over one thousand books. I learned how to live from the characters I encountered. The first book I ever read was The Passport of Malam Illia, and to this day it’s the reason I never take vengeance. And there’s plenty to be angry about around here. Most of my friends are poor. When we were growing up, police would come to the slum in the evening, pick up my friends, and beat them for no reason. It made me so angry. But books also taught me that we have the power to change things. We can fight for lower fuel prices. We can fight for better medical facilities. I’m actually heading to a protest right now. We haven’t had electricity in this slum for ten days. Why? Because last month we protested and now they’re trying to punish us. But we won’t sit down. Too many poor people don’t realize their own power because they’ve been subjugated for too long. They’re like the chickens I keep in my house. Every time I whistle, the chickens come. Even when I don’t have food in my hand. And that’s how people think. They believe that only government has the power to give. But anything the government has power to give, we have the power to take for ourselves.” Humanofny(Lagos, Nigeria)
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“ the newspaper owner suggested that I supplement my income with bribes. He told me: ‘I’m giving you a platform. Use what you have to get what you need.’ I knew then that the rumors were true. Journalism in this country was corrupted. There was no idealism. Reporters were writing stories for money. And even more damaging, they were killing stories for money. I didn’t want to participate. I felt it would be more ethical to just find a corporate job. But in 2008, I was given the opportunity to manage a new paper founded by Nigeria’s only Pulitzer Prize winner—Dele Olojede. The paper was called Next. And we tried to change things. We hired young people who were untainted by the culture. Half of them were women. We paid them well and we trained them well. Ethics came first. Accepting gifts was absolutely forbidden. Our paper survived for three years. During that time, we broke major stories every single week. We exposed all sorts of corruption. But we were targeted for our success. Our reporters were detained. Our board members were threatened. The government leaned on our advertisers, and they withdrew one by one. Eventually we were forced to close. But for three years we set the pace. We created a mold. And I believe we changed the media landscape. Investigative journalism is stronger now. Many of our journalists have gone on to start amazing publications of their own. The paper may have been short lived, but I know it had an impact. Revolution is too strong of a word-- but we definitely shook the table.” Humanofny(Lagos, Nigeria)
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Blaksheep:will be glad |
Hello |
Wagon |
Aveo |
Sharp |
Honda |
Es350 |
[ quote author=DLuciano post=71780377]All are scammers, deal at your own risk![/quote [size=8pt][/size][/font][quote][/quote][code][/code][b][/b][i][/i][s][/s][left][/left][font=Lucida Sans Unicode][url][/url][sub][/sub][sup][/sup] |
DLuciano:we have a deal before? |
System0001:so |
Need serious buyer sharp sharp |
Wilfredpat22:this one dey kolomental o bad mouthing my post. Oloshi |
Call |
Es |
kingsclass:how serious |
Let it fly |
Kayharry:urgent sale |
Banter1:you mention nemesis and reference where is adedibu of which adedibu don die.
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carbon1224:ijaye ojokoro lagos |
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