Lazkizz's Posts
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![]() I dedicate “Rich Spirit” by Kendrick Lamar to Aşiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Great jam! |
Congrats sir I dedicate “Rich Spirit” by Kendrick Lamar to Aşiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Great jam! |
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ComrdDRS1:hmmmm |
Okk... Chat me up on WhatsApp... Let conclude |
Okk... Chat me up on WhatsApp... Let conclude 08069929209 |
ComrdDRS1:yess .....we always On business |
ohams1985:yess boss ...we waybill nation wide |
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Still on it . |
keystone123:click on my thread for catfish |
![]() KillerCrocodile: |
Ukraine is down. Backmut has been taken.Ukraine running out of ammunition faster than her allies can provide.Ukraine casualties at an astronomical high. New Ukrainian recruits have a life expectancy of just 3-4 hours after introduction to the war front. Counter offensive Intel of the Pentagon exposed... It's almost the end of the road for Ukraine. With Russia strong alliance with China, Iran,north Korea,India, Brazil, Vietnam, Turkey and recently Saudi Arabia. Using their oil resources to frustrate the West and USA Even Nigeria are sidely supporting Russia in this warBecause the whole world is tried of USA and the West forcing their LGBTQ laws on the whole world, and making hard policies that will keep Africa undeveloped E.g killing and overthrowing any Africa leader with a Good future plans for his country.
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Hi |
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My guy has applied Nigeria Navy 9 times Without success, the last one he passed through all the screening and was in onne Navy camp port Harcourt Rivers state. 4 months in the training process , the instructor assembly everyone on a straight line and some highly rank naval Officers, will ask you "Who is your Godfather" If you don't have any you Will be give 20k and be sent out of the training camp . An insider said you will be replaced with special candidates who will just completed the remaining two months of your 6 months training and they will be commissioned on the (POP) passing out parade day. Now this is not only in the Navy but in all military and paramilitary forces of Nigeria, with stories like this most people have lost hope in Nigeria. Nigeria need a Total overhaul in every sector.
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yes he did |
;D8 |
SmartPolician:men... I think we need military coup to resett the heads of our politicians |
A former Nigerian president, Olusegun Obasanjo, has explained why Nigeria has not experienced military intervention in its democratic journey since 1999. Giving specific insight into how he handled the challenge when he was in office, Mr. Obasanjo revealed how he cleverly placed senior military officers on compulsory retirement. “On assuming office as president, I decided to put an end to these incessant coups. I asked the military to submit the list of all officers who had either participated in coups in the past or benefited in the dividends of coups by being appointed to political office as governors or ministers,” the former president wrote. “Not knowing what the list was meant for, the military faithfully compiled it and submitted to me as the commander-in-chief and chairman of council of each of the arms of service. Ninety-three officers in all were given six hours’ notice of retirement on a Friday, and ordered not to spend the Friday night in uniform or in barracks to prevent adverse reaction. “The following Monday, the service council met to ratify the retirement of all the officers. From my vantage position and background as a battle-tested and war-victorious general, I knew that an officer out of uniform and barracks is like a fish out of water, and their power and influence would be greatly diminished. “The retirement of these 93 officers all in one day was salutary. It meant that taking part in a coup ot benefitting from one could catch up with you, no matter how long it would takes, and for as long as you are alive,” he explained. Mr. Obasanjo, who first ruled Nigeria as a military head of state between 1976 and 1979, later governed the nation as a democratically elected leader between 1999 and 2007. While giving insights into how nations of the world can put an end to military interventions, the former president explained that no matter the excuse, military interventions had major negative impact on democracy, governance and unity of Nigeria. He, however, argued that the often prescribed solution of specifically putting a ban on coups in the constitution was not the answer. “A coup is a treason punishable by death only if it fails, and yet it puts the plotter in the State House if it succeeds. It was a destructive and destabilising practice, wasteful for the military itself, and undermining in terms of discipline, good order and military conduct,” Mr. Obasanjo wrote. “A junior officer takes a gun and looks at his political boss and senior officers through its sights, bumps them off and puts himself in the State House. “He instantly becomes superior and senior to all political and military officers. Such was the situation existing in Nigeria between 1966 and 1999.” Mr. Obasanjo, however, noted that the officers’ retirement did not stand in the way of any of them entering public life or making progress in it. “Some of them later entered politics and became elected governors; some went into parliament; others got appointed as ministers and ambassadors,” he wrote. “The idea was not to punish them for life but to exclude them from positions in the military where they could be coup planners, coup plotters, coup executors or coup beneficiaries. “And once an officer has tasted the trappings of a political life, of living in a government house, with free food and so on, he would easily look for excuses to want more if he is in a position to make it happen.” Explaining why the nation hasn’t experienced such incidence of coup d’etat, the former president said the measure was quite effective even if it wasn’t perfect. “The fact that since 1999, there has not been a coup or an attempted coup in Nigeria speaks to the effectiveness of the measures taken to put an end to the destabilizing influence of coups on the political life and dispensation of Nigeria. “Before 1999, and since independence, the longest that a democratic dispensation had lasted was six years –from 1960 to 1966.
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