₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,327,382 members, 8,430,740 topics. Date: Sunday, 21 June 2026 at 01:04 AM

Toggle theme

Litmus's Posts

Nairaland ForumLitmus's ProfileLitmus's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 (of 361 pages)

Science/TechnologyWatch Live Spacex's Historic Starship SN8 Launch From Boca Chica by Litmus(op): 6:15pm On Dec 08, 2020
PoliticsRe: Nigeria's Population Now 206 Million - NPC by Litmus: 5:08pm On Dec 08, 2020
chrisxxx:
Nigeria Population is no where close to 200 million. I can give you a prove. Check the population of Mali, Chad and Niger, going by population distribution as taught in elementary Geography teaches us you will know the population distribution particularly in the North is false. North West alone has a population more than Niger Republic. There is no geographical explanation to this. North West population is also more than Chad. There is no way this can be true. I am not only picking on North West, this analysis also affects other part of Nigeria. In the South there is no country below I would have used that to compare as well. So it is not only a northern bogus population it is all over the country.
It is possible if, as I believe, Nigeria's population is being swelled by influx from other West African and Central African nations. Nigeria, unlike other African nations, does not boast about numbers of none nationals that full the country.
TravelRe: Nigerian Embassy In Germany Fires Guard Over Sex-For-Passport Scandal by Litmus: 4:57pm On Dec 08, 2020
pansophist:
Sex for one of the worlds weakest passport that punishes you as you travel with it ? Seriously ?

If they were fukcing for Canadian, Australian ,German or Dutch passport, I can understand. But Nigerian? Really?

People sha
Well now you're better informed. Next time, you'll know that passports people are willing to exchange for sex include, Canadian, Australian, German, Dutch and Nigerian passports.
PoliticsRe: Reno Omokri: Biafrans Built This Armoured Car During The Civil War by Litmus: 12:31pm On Dec 08, 2020
www.nairaland.com/attachments/12782253_fastsave_jpeg8efcca4d1376457576da11fb9c275ee5

Amazing to think that I’m looking at a thing possibly created with some parts taking from my great grandfather’s Lorries. Nigerians are clever.
PoliticsRe: A Cameroonian & A Beninore Arrested While Attempting To Write Immigration Exam by Litmus:
The argument that north tolerates indigenes of Niger, Chad and Northern Cameroon abusing the sovereignty of Nigeria and consequently South should encourage or argue against indigenes of Benin Republic, Cameroon, Togo, and so on being prevented from coming to abuse our sovereignty also, is absurd.

People from Niger, Chad and North Cameroon are allowed in Nigeria to come, kill, take, jobs, and steal so we must let people from Dahomy, South Cameroon, Togo and Central Africa to come kill, take jobs, and steal because, what, fair-is-fair?
PoliticsRe: A Cameroonian & A Beninore Arrested While Attempting To Write Immigration Exam by Litmus: 11:09am On Dec 08, 2020
Nigeria is already compromised by foreigners in the system, which is why whenever there is an issue concerning Nigeria’s Interest versus the “Other’s” Interest, the “Other” receives more support over Nigeria’s Interest. The support by many here for these foreigners’ interests over National interest is an example. Remember you don’t know the true national origins of the “I am Nigerian, I hate this country” brigade.

I’m an ardent supporter of immigrants trying to get into Europe. I support immigration in the United Kingdom but I am tremendously against immigration in Nigeria. The reason I support Immigration to Europe, America, UK and so on is because Immigrants love Europe, America, UK an so on. Immigrants also love South Africa. Same is not the case with Nigeria. West African and Africans generally almost always profess a loathing for Nigerians. The Immigrants that loathed Western Nations were Islamic extremists; now, refer to history to see the consequences.

Nigeria needs to be concerned about African immigrants. Nigerian need to be weary of those that tell you that “You Are All Africans” and consequently you should do away with border control and that borders are in any case arbitrarily drawn by Europeans. These same Africans would kick you out of their nations in the blink of an eye if they could and when they can due to them achieving reasonably unquestionable superior development in their Nations.
Science/TechnologyThese Are The Asteroids To Worry About by Litmus(op): 10:53pm On Dec 06, 2020
RomanceRe: Two Cute Nairalanders Set To Wed (Pre-Wedding Photos) by Litmus: 9:42pm On Dec 04, 2020
Physically them be mates. The dude is okay and the bride to be is a little bit better looking; usually, Nigerian women are way, way better looking than the men they marry. Anyway, as majority will have done, here’s wishing them a happy, fruitful and prosperous married life when it happens.
FoodRe: The Poor Meal Man Got In Ibadan N10k Per Night Hotel by Litmus: 7:09pm On Dec 04, 2020
£19 pounds a night hotel and they served you food? shocked

Please don’t tell me you also got a bed, a room, used lights, used water to bath, and were served by staff that expect wages, this would be too much to believe.
PoliticsRe: Why Have Nigerians Abandoned Marina District In Lagos? by Litmus: 9:01pm On Dec 03, 2020
olujastro:
Better say what you know.
I know one of the biggest developers in Lekki, he's a Nigerian. Sijumoto, one of the most popular developers in Banana Island is a Nigerian too. So I don't know where you come up with your info from, simply because Chagoury is the one handling Eko Atlantic.
Lol, you noticed.

Between his, "Labanese made Lagos" and the other one's, "nothing can be compared to South Africa", one could be forgiven for thinking.....
PoliticsRe: Truly The Light Of Nation: Pictures by Litmus: 2:20pm On Dec 03, 2020
We need to revisit the chemistry of ingredients used in producing the pavements commonly laid beside Nigerian roads (the few times when we do lay down pavements) for they often appear mouldy in no time. This grubby appearance is already ruining the aesthetics of some of Nigeria’s newly established architectural showpiece like the Abuja train station.
FashionRe: Vivian Okpala Crowned The New Face Of Nigeria 2020 by Litmus: 2:08pm On Dec 03, 2020
Vivian Grasshopper smiley or is my understanding of the pronunciation and spelling inaccurate.
PoliticsRe: Insecurity: ‘$1bn Underway For Army, Police, Others From Qatar’ by Litmus: 2:03pm On Dec 03, 2020
Funny how two nations, Quarter and United Arab Emirates, accused of being among the top sponsors of world terror groups -Bokoharam including - are suddenly acting towards Nigeria in ways that will misdirect fingers of accusations pointed at them?
AgricultureRe: FG Engages 17,000 Youths In Rabbit Farming by Litmus: 1:55pm On Dec 03, 2020
Noblejay7:
Instead of this why not engage some reputable IT firm to teach this 17,000 youth relevant ICT skill like coding e.t.c
I doubt any Rabbit farming imitative would preclude this. Nigerians are maths nuts and the government that does not already take into consideration your views would be a short-sighted and unrealistic one.
AgricultureRe: FG Engages 17,000 Youths In Rabbit Farming by Litmus: 10:33pm On Dec 02, 2020
Any youth that grabs self some of these rabbits, plans well, dedicates self and works hard could find him or herself onto something worthwhile here. Indeed far from being potential candidates for derision may end up having the last laugh. I’m not sure what rabbit farming husbandry is like, I mean in regards to dieses, practicality of feeding, housing them and so on but I do - like majority of people - know that rabbits are prolific breeders to the extent that, in some places like Australia, they are considered invasive pests. Therefore a dedicated rabbit farmer could expect to harvest lost of meat for the market place. Rabbit pelt or skin also could provide income for the enterprising youth.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdUQzGIb1_c


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8hDDVuAm3A
Science/TechnologyWhy He Thinks Starship Only Has 2 Rear Fins by Litmus(op): 3:46pm On Dec 01, 2020
PoliticsRe: Garba Shehu: 43 Farmers Killed By Boko Haram Didn’t Have Clearance To Farm by Litmus: 6:11pm On Nov 30, 2020
It seems reasonable to assume that the military first needs to declare a contested area safe before those displaced can safely return. Presumably the farmers "Didn’t Have Clearance To Farm"
TravelRe: What Bode Thomas Street, Surulere Looks Like In 2020 (pics, Video) by Litmus: 12:00am On Nov 30, 2020
hedonister:
Bode Thomas is one of the most popular streets in Lagos and it is located in Surulere. I'll be showing you what it looks like in 2020.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nz-I1bb11w
Has a happy feeling to the place. Although I want Nigerian cities to be the best in the world, I could easily live here. With just a little more greenery it will look like so many places in any average Western city.
CareerRe: Meet Ebere Asonibe, A Graduate Who Is A Native Doctor by Litmus:
Another reason Africa failed to industrialise was due to abandoning culture. Industrisation has a great deal of its formative yeas imbibed in culture. It's through manufacturing the wrappers, the statues, the building, the containers, the philosophy - essentially the instruments that facilitate the culture that societies lay the groundwork for industrialisation.
CareerRe: Meet Ebere Asonibe, A Graduate Who Is A Native Doctor by Litmus: 11:52pm On Nov 28, 2020
Good on her and she's a credit to her ethnic group and Nigerian nationality for respecting our heritage, modernising and thus lending this aspect of it some modicum of respectability.
TravelRe: How Garrison Flyover Solved Perennial Traffic Logjam In Port Harcourt (Pix Video by Litmus: 5:10am On Nov 28, 2020
Prodigee:
I don't just fancy this black and white painting of road sides. Makes it all look funny
I hate it too. Gives road developments in Nigeria a primitive, colonial and especially cheap look.
CrimeRe: Gunmen Kidnap & Kill ETK Amah In Port Harcourt, Dump Body On Bridge by Litmus: 5:00am On Nov 28, 2020
riroye3263:
Quick question- did the indigenous natives occupying their ancestral land came together one day to call themselves Nigeria as we have it today ?
Hmmm, I cannot think of one place anywhere in the world that natives in the area came together one day or any day, actually, and called themselves whatever the nation they are now in is called.
Science/TechnologySANDY MUNRO Rejects TESLA Battery Day Doubts by Litmus(op): 1:19am On Nov 27, 2020
Science/TechnologyStarship Sn8's Final Static Fire In 4K Slow Motion! by Litmus(op): 12:26am On Nov 27, 2020
TravelRe: Kaduna-Abuja Train Breaks Down In Bush By 2am, Stranded Passengers Cry Out by Litmus: 2:06pm On Nov 26, 2020
Nigerians: have mobile phones will film and put online in the delusion that your country is shit while other countries out there are heave and that the folks of these heaven will join you in condemning your shithole. But you’re only half right. Yes they will join you in cursing your shithole country but they don’t live in heavenly countries, they also live in their own shithole. Eventually the world will learn to hate Nigerian because Nigerians are always posting video online in which they are seen screaming at officials. Pitty. angry

You’ll become the shouty, screamy people because, eventually, the psychology of seeing something as exceptionally bad just because the people say it is exceptionally bad will wear off, and no one out there will remotely believe any longer that your situation is worst than theirs.
PoliticsRe: Niger Delta Youths In Ukwuani Shut Down Oil Facilities At Night (Video) by Litmus: 1:02pm On Nov 26, 2020
Oil is dead, people don’t realize since the body trembles still.
TravelRe: Fun Things To Do In Abuja | Kayaking At The National Stadium, Abuja by Litmus:
Teewhy2:
why is abroad water always blue and Nigeria own is mostly brown?
For one thing, the guys in Abuja are in a local pond not ocean or lake. For another thing, Nigerians haven’t learned how to market themselves. For example, majority of images you see in cook books from abroad aren’t real food, since real food can be hard to capture well in photos. In the Western world, professionals’ jazz things to look fantastic and better than the thing are in actuality. Professionals in marketing could make even the pond the guys in the photo are in look like a most wonderful place to spend some of your leisure time.


One thing though, if that pond in Abuja was in some other African country most of you would say it’s the best place in the world. smiley
PoliticsTrump Imposes New Rule For Some African Travellers by Litmus(op): 5:00pm On Nov 24, 2020
Citizens of 15 African countries will have to post bonds of up to $15,000 (£11,000) to visit the US, according to a new temporary travel rule

which comes into effect on 24 December.

The six-month pilot programme - which targets those on both visitor and business visas - will act as a deterrent to those who overstay their visas, the US state department said.

Outgoing President Donald Trump, who lost a re-election bid earlier this month, made restricting immigration a central part of his four-year term in office.

President-elect Joe Biden, a Democrat, has pledged to reverse many of the Republican president’s immigration policies, but untangling hundreds of changes could take months or years.

The visa bond rule targets countries whose nationals had an “overstay rate” of 10% or higher in 2019 and will now be required to pay a refundable bond of $5,000, $10,000 or $15,000.

While those nations had higher rates of overstays, they sent relatively few travellers to the US, Reuters news agency reports.

The African countries affected are: Angola, Burkina Faso, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, The Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Libya, Mauritania, Sudan, Sao Tome and Principe, Cape Verde, Burundi.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-africa-47639452
CelebritiesRe: Top Nigerian Celebrities Who Spray Bundle Of Cash At Parties by Litmus: 4:44pm On Nov 24, 2020
The act of singing ones praise has deep roots in many Nigerian cultures. In fact, the origins or Rap music is derived from this African tradition of praise singing about the deeds and heroic acts of an individual, not just as a means of preserving history orally. Dash is a subset of this; which is now dismissed by the ignorant as mere vanity and boasting. So people need to leave Nigerians alone to celebrate as they choose and stop trying to superimpose on Nigerians foreign white values. Leave our warriors to spread their arms and swagger forward, spraying money in order to show those gathered what heroes and men of substance they are. It’s an echo from the past and should be let to survive.
CelebritiesRe: Top Nigerian Celebrities Who Spray Bundle Of Cash At Parties by Litmus: 4:25pm On Nov 24, 2020
I love the tradition, all Nigerians should adopt it. We don’t want to live in a bleached world devoid of all character, colour and flavour in the name of aping white people. I have no doubt that if this was a popular tradition in western weddings or parties all the bush people condemning it would think it was the height of civilisation.

And I suspect there is an element of attempted social engineering in these condemnations. Firstly there’s attempt to demonise all Nigerian practices because there is realisation out there that one of Nigeria’s greatest strength is her culture. Secondly, there is an attempt to portray Nigeria to the world as a place devoid of happiness, life and any form of wealth. Those that want Nigeria viewed as a hell-hole dislike when Nigerians upload weddings resplendent with Nigeria’s lavish and luxuriant looking traditional wear on Youtube, they hate that the world should look on anything Nigerian with any form of admiration, curiosity or wonder.


Bonus point:

Thirdly a people with their own traditions and culture are a people not easy consumers of western goods. Western Capitalism does not like people informed by their own culture. The less culturally informed you are the more likely you are to be a consumer of Western goods and services. It pays foreigners in the long run to brainwash Nigerians into abandoning their culture.
PoliticsRe: UK Parliament Debates #EndSARS Crisis by Litmus: 2:20am On Nov 24, 2020
faoogoke:
Priti Patel sought to publicly intervene three times on behalf of an offshore company which has been accused in a British court of obtaining a £100m contract from the Nigerian government through corruption.

She repeatedly backed the company, Process & Industrial Development (P&ID), a British Virgin Islands-registered gas company, in its long legal dispute with the Nigerian government over a gas processing plant.

The home secretary is currently in the centre of a political storm after being accused of bullying staff in her department. She faces calls to resign after an investigation concluded that she had breached the ministerial code of conduct, although it also found her actions may have been “unintentional”.

Ms Patel’s intervention in the court case took place before she was appointed home secretary by Boris Johnson. She was joined in supporting the company by Shanker Singham, a prominent fellow Brexit advocate, who is now a government trade adviser, in the bitterly contested legal action.

The case had been an issue of huge public interest in Nigeria with accusations of bribery and collusion between public officials and private concerns. President Muhammadu Buhari raised the matter during a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in September. “The present Nigerian government is facing the challenges of corruption head on,” he said. “We are giving notice to international criminal groups by the vigorous prosecution of the P&ID scam attempting to cheat Nigeria out of billions of dollars.”

P&ID had an agreement with Nigeria to build a massive plant to process natural gas. No work, however, was carried out on the plant. The company blamed the government for not supplying the gas; the government claims the contract was part of a fraudulent scheme.

P&ID had won compensation of $10bn over the failed deal. But the Nigerian government are appealing against the judgment, claiming that massive bribes had been paid to secure the contract.

P&ID denies any wrongdoing and holds that the Nigerian government had invented the corruption allegations in an effort to avoid paying compensation and to delay the seizure of assets.

In September, a judge in London granted the Nigerian government the right to appeal. He ruled that “Nigeria has established a strong prima facie case” that the contract was “procured by bribes paid to insiders as part of a larger scheme to defraud Nigeria”. Sitting in the High Court earlier this month, Sir Ross Cranston added that there is “also a strong prima facie case” that one of the firm’s directors, and a main witness in the court case “gave perjured evidence”.

The Nigerian government had a separate ruling in their favour when the court ordered the release of £200m it had put in place as security while the appeal is being heard. Judge Cranston had rejected the request by P&ID to increase the security level to £400m.

Ms Patel first publicly supported P&ID in an article for the newspaper City AM in November 2018, saying that Nigeria “must honour its obligations to companies like P&ID” and pay the firm “almost $9bn” (as the sum in legal action was at that stage). She condemned the further legal action by the Nigerian government as a “running scandal”, “obstinate”, and “flouting international law and convention”.

In May last year, Ms Patel wrote an introduction to a pamphlet by Shanker Singham which also backed P&ID against Nigeria. The pamphlet had been produced by a consultancy firm run by Mr Singham, called Competere.

The same month Ms Patel co-wrote an article in the Daily Telegraph newspaper with Mr Singham about post-Brexit aid and trade, offering support once again for P&ID, and an apparent warning to Nigeria on the consequences for its alleged failure to adhere to laws.

The article said: “The erosion of Nigeria’s commitment to the rule of law is highly worrying. Currently, Nigeria is a defendant in multiple investor disputes, including with telecoms firm MTN; an energy project with P&ID; and a hydroelectric contract with Sunrise Power. In the P&ID case, Nigeria owes the company over $9bn, due to Nigeria’s failure to honour a gas supply contract.”

It continued: “The UK’s national interest is best-served by an open system that encourages free trade, protects property rights, and upholds the rule of law. Our development strategy and our independent trade policy post-Brexit can be harnessed to ensure maximum value for the British taxpayer.”

There were already recurring allegations of corruption in Nigeria over the deal when Ms Patel and Mr Singham expressed their support for P&ID in the second article.

The day before the Telegraph article appeared there was an interview with Brendan Cahill, from Ireland, one of the co-founders of P&ID, in a Nigerian newspaper during which he was asked “there has been a persistent claim that P&ID is a ‘fake’ company that made a ‘fraudulent arrangement’ with some persons in Nigeria. How do you react to this claim?”

Mr Cahill replied: “We are well aware of the government’s efforts to characterise P&ID, and its founders, as frauds. This is absolutely false. The arbitrators in London spent five years carefully reviewing the written agreement and all the facts surrounding the deal, and in the end they unanimously concluded that Nigeria was to blame for the deal’s collapse and had to pay damages to P&ID.”

The Nigerian government alleges that P&ID paid more than $390,000 (almost £303,000) in bribes to secure the contract. The country’s attorney general, Abubakar Malami, submitted a witness statement to the Property Courts of England and Wales, High Courts of Justice in January this year.

Mr Malami, in his statement, alleges that P&ID indirectly paid more than $300,000 (£225, 850) to a company linked to an official who reviewed the contract. It also alleges two P&ID executives dropped a duffel bag packed with $50,000 in the trunk of his car in the capital, Abuja, in April 2009.

Grace Taiga, a former petroleum ministry lawyer in Nigeria who oversaw a contract review committee, has also been charged with accepting bribes from P&ID-linked companies between 2015 and 2019. Ms Taiga was scheduled to retire in September 2010, say investigators, but she remained in her position for another 16 months as the P&ID contract was being finalised.

Ms Taiga has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Ms Patel and Mr Singham did not respond to questions about their public support for P&ID and whether they were aware of the corruption allegations.

P&ID did not respond to questions about the legal action or why Ms Patel and Mr Singham was supporting them, or what their working relationship was with Ms Patel and Mr Singham.

The company said previously: “The economic cost to Nigeria of fighting and losing this case is substantial. Nigeria, which emerged from recession in 2017, approved a three-year plan in 2016 to borrow more from abroad.

“The government wants 40 per cent of its loans to come from offshore to lower borrowing costs and help to fund its record-high budgets. In addition, the Buhari administration continues to incur costs in fighting this battle in the UK and US courts, and due to its failure to comply with court procedures, has been forced to pay some costs of P&ID’s counsel.

“The re-elected Buhari administration must come to terms with the award and decide whether to continue with delaying tactics to postpone the inevitable, or if the new government has the courage to atone for its previous mistakes and reach a settlement that will allow the country to move forward.”
Solomon Hughes and Kim Sengupta

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 (of 361 pages)