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Naijareferee's Posts

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Politics / Re: June 12 1993 Election Results Analysis by naijareferee: 10:00pm On Dec 04, 2022
This is an insanely rigged election... Look at that ondo figure... How was that even possible... Lagos had over a million vote.... Plateau had over 400k votes...
Imagine bauchi having over 700k, rivers, over 1m .... Have
I see why they cancelled that election... It was a sham
Career / Re: COREN Registration Thread by naijareferee: 6:50am On Jul 09, 2021
mayemaye:


Thats the reason for the delayed reflection

COREN normally drops the link to payment on your page, but this takes time
Hello.
I will like to know what they mean by work experience confirmer during coren application?
Career / Re: How To Become A Registered Nigerian engineer by naijareferee: 6:43am On Jul 09, 2021
adanny01:


I dont think its about your first degree. Its about his application and the COREN review staff. The whole application is reviewed based on info you supplied.

See screenshot of my application form, professional info part.

The first things on that page is the proposers, the work experience confirmer and then engineering field.

Its your work experience and qualifications that will support his application into a certain division.

In his case, i dont think he chose to be registered as a civil engineer. If he doesnot have the requisite work experience and work confirmer, he would not be registered as a chemical engineer. Unless their was a mix up.

If i studied civil in UG but switched to mechanical in PG, my work experience will have to be submitted in only one discipline which cannot conflict to either my UG or PG qualification. Meanwhile a work experience confirmation is also required to register you under the discipline.

What do you think will happen to an application in mechanical engineering when the applicant has zero experience in mechanical but has required yrsof experience in civil engineering. In this case, if COREN registers him as a Mechanical engineer, then the did so knowing he has no Mechanical engineering experience and have given him a mechanical engineering practice license. It will be totaly wrong.

Therefore, if the person in your instance never had an experience in chemical engineering being a lecturer in civil, then i would say its an oversight or mistake by COREN have him registered as a chemical engineer.

What is that work experience confirmer. What does it mean?
Phones / Re: Avoid Jumia If You're Shopping Outside Lagos by naijareferee: 6:13pm On Feb 21, 2021
Lol...jumia abi na jumai...
People I ordered for a mobile phone to use as val gift, nigger s didn't bring the item up until I cancelled the order and I am yet to get a refund.
I made an order and payed on 2nd Feb and cancelled order on 20th of Feb...
They are yet to refund me... Asked me to wait for 15 days to get my refund.... I think konga is better by far...
Career / Re: Has Any Federal Civil Servant Received The New Minimum Wage? by naijareferee: 4:01pm On Dec 31, 2020
oscar4lyf:

was paid my Dec salary some days ago, but this prom arrears dropped in today, hoping for NMWQ

Are you not the same guy looking for job just this august and looking for electrical intern in 2018. Hoe come you are noe recieving salary plus arrears of promotion as a polytechnic staff? Dont be ridiculous please?

1 Like

Politics / Re: Can We Trust General Buhari With Nigeria by naijareferee: 11:00am On Dec 12, 2020
I still remember this post like it was yesterday...
Cc.
Lalasticlala
Politics / Re: True Origin Of Yoruba? by naijareferee: 7:47am On Sep 14, 2020
You still day learn work... Lol

1 Like

Politics / Re: True Origin Of Yoruba? by naijareferee: 7:37am On Sep 14, 2020
A source was presented for the above assertions, counter with a world renowned source, and stop the childish tantrums...

1 Like

Politics / True Origin Of Yoruba? by naijareferee: 6:14am On Sep 14, 2020
Was fiddling with my phone, then I came across this interesting piece of history.
Are the Yoruba from the Hausa tribe?
Are Hausa the progenitor of the Yoruba tribe?
See image below
Source: Encyclopedia britannica.

Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 3:17pm On Jul 25, 2020
Kezbaba:


Hmmmm!
Prof! Thank you for sharing with us.
This is an eye opener to every stakeholders in educational sector.
But how did our educational sector, tourism sector, business and finance sector have degenerated that private sector have to come in and salvage the situation for this country?
What Shame to our Leaders in this country!

The policies, politics, activities and inactivities aided, first, the brain drain abroad in search of better and stable education, then the emergence of private institutions to relegate public institutions to the level of public primary and secondary schools.
Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:45am On Jul 25, 2020
ThreeBlackBird:
By the time I'm done reading all this, it would put food on my table and take away my problem. Coronavirus would disappear and we'll all have our lives back. Thank you OP for making such fantastic thread.

Lol...
Even if You don't read it... If there is no food or source of food for the table, my brother I assure you, there won't be food on that table...

1 Like

Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:19am On Jul 25, 2020
25. Have you taken stock of the number of lectures and staff of public universities whose children are in private universities? Does that begin to look like teachers in public primary and secondary schools with their children in private schools, even in rural areas?

26. Have you imagined parents realizing that our big public universities may have to cancel the 2020/2021 session entirely as many of them are yet to go far with the first semester of 2019/2020 session?
27. Are you aware that Private universities in the southwest of Nigeria are operating at comparatively high levels, and that in some global ranking of universities, Covenant University features highly? Are you aware that Babcock and Covenant among others are unable to admit all those who currently apply to them for admission? Are you aware that there is a possibility that up to 60% of students in some private universities in the southwest of Nigeria bear names sounding like coming from the southeast of Nigeria? Are aware that private universities in the southeast are struggling to have students, but that 2020/2021 admissions exercise may be a turning point for them? Are you aware that if that happens parents may realise that it is better to find N500,000 to N700,000 to pay to keep their children in private universitiesrather than have them at home longer, or in fact intermittently?

28. Do you realise that the people in the southeast, may be slow to join a bandwagon, but when they do, they tend to do it more? When the consciousness of private universities catches on in the southeast, and aligned with the slow but steady crawling up that has happened/happening in the southwest, that may change the face of university education in Nigeria, and if that happens, we may end up like OPEC, assuming you are important but only for yourself, and unlike 30 years ago, no one knows when OPEC is meeting? Are we getting to a stage where ASUU will go on strike and no one but ASUU will know?
Just questions? Are our public universities heading in the direction of our public private and secondary schools?

Just a question!

Seun
Lalasticlala
Ishilove
Mynd44
Fynestboi

3 Likes

Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:17am On Jul 25, 2020
15. While that is happening, even in rural areas, teachers no longer want their children to school in the schools in which they teach. That was different in the past, when a teacher would walk to school every morning with his own child/children. Today our public schools have teachers with NCE and university degrees, but would send their own children to private schools with untrained teachers, many of them with just secondary school certificates. How do you explain that?

16. The case of our secondary schools is sad. Very little relationship between the school certificate grades and subsequent performance. Yet the NUT will pretend that this is not an issue and in fact protects this. Study the situation with secondary school teachers especially the males. Many are drunk with alcohol before 8 am every day. You think this is exaggerated? Investigate this.

*Now the Universities*

17. Is there no real possibility that our public universities are heading the same way as our public primary and secondary schools? Many persons seem to suspect that there is a move to shift the fulcrum of the Nigeria university system towards the private. Afterall as some would say, Harvard, Yale, Stanford, etc., are private universities. Clearly by 2007 and the years preceding more private universities had emerged, and fewer public universities, especially at the Federal level emerged between 1999 and 2007. The scenario of having more public universities, Federal and states, got reversed since 2011.

18. As VC of one of the 12 new Federal Universities established in 2011/2012, I have repeatedly reminded colleagues, that we have to justify being established. Many persons believe we should not have been established, that the country has many poorly delivering public universities, and rather than establish new ones, we should focus on the older struggling universities. But that is a school thought. There are of course counter arguments on this. Nevertheless, my position that we need to justify being created, becoming original and innovative, carving a niche, learning from the challenges that we see, and frog jumping ahead remain valid. But we may not rise to this consciousness and performance seemingly because colleagues have chosen not to, or may act as if they have forgotten what the idea of the university, and the responsibility of the academia, as a vocation, a calling, rather than an occupation. I have made attempts to distinguish between the lost sheep and the sheep in hiding.

19. Nothing exposes the weakness of our country, and our university more than the current COVID-19 pandemic. In a period of some kind of war against humanity and our life and livelihood, the Nigeria intellectual class is anonymous. We find excuse to be unpatriotic and missing in action. This is not a war of guns and bullets but of brains. A country with about 200 universities, largely lacking in conviction, soul and spirit. Who did this to us?

20. 1967 to 1970, Nigeria faced a war of guns and bullets, and the intellectual class was neither missing nor anonymous. The intellectual class of Biafra was patriotic and not distracted by the correctness or incorrectness of the political leadership they had to deal with, its adequacy, logic or lack of it, but saw a problem of hunger, death and defeat and did not wait to be mobilized, cajoled or begged. Today with many more universities, PhDs and professors, we are comparatively unable to rise to the level of performance and delivery of more than half a century ago. We wonder at the performance of Senegalese, Egyptians and South African universities, laboratories, and professors, engaged with human trails of vaccines, and we fold our arms, watch the soaps and movies of the National Assembly, while waiting for the British, French and Germans to produce vaccines.

21. We have a generation of academics sufficiently victims of self and society, spending time in beer palours and motor parks, and often found in the company of jesters. The quality of discussion has become very pedestal and lacking rigour. We even advance arguments to our ‘dis-welfare’ and ‘dis-wellbeing’, if there are things like that. We are so focused on bread and butter, in least exerting interests, that we do not see more ennobling use of the certificates we carry. We lose respect every day and everywhere, and we do not see that, because by the hierarchy of needs, food, drinks and clothing are more urgent than honour, dignity, and resepct. We reduce our presentations to japs without evidence, as in beer palours and hairdressing salons, keeping with the dictum, tell me your friends and I tell you who you are.

22. Yes, it’s the COVID-19, but also the ASUU strike. Perhaps apart from AE-FUNAI that concluded the first semester 2019/2020, which other? The culture of lack of seriousness and no respect for NUC prescribed carrying capacities lures by the corner. Let’s assume that the public universities reopen by October 2020 or January 2021, where are the universities on their academic calendars? AE-FUNAI may commence the second semester of 2019/2020 by either that October 2020 or January 2021 and ending that by January 2021 or April 2021. Right? Then we may commence the 2020/2021 session by February 2021 or May 2021. But JAMB says we should admit for 2020/2021 session from August 2020! When will those admitted commence studies? Will JAMB advertise for 2021/2022 admission by December 2020, going by the convention? Will WAEC and NECO hold from September 2020 as being planned?
23. While this is the lot of the Public universities - COVID-19 plus ASUU strike, the private universities have COVID-19 minus ASUU strike. In this period, the private universities have been having lectures online, taking tests and examinations, having matriculations and even convocations, organising webinars/seminars, etc. Some people will argue that the main constraints to online learning is how to conduct practicals/workshops and similar. But if the private universities continue online with what they are doing, have we thought about “Alternative to Practical”, which many public universities have been doing, and can you image they adopt a European style “Modules”, in which there is a phased invitation on aspects of the practicals and workshops running every day for one week, and staggered, with the necessary examinations at the end? Imagine a Practical laboratory class that should run for twelve weeks of two/three hours a week, being collapsed into one week of only practicals and workshops each lasting four/six hours a day for six days in a week, and which ends in twelve days (two weeks)?

24. Have we imagined the private universities successfully making a case to reopen in September 2020 for this purpose and reopening a new 2020/2021 session by October 2020?

1 Like

Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:16am On Jul 25, 2020
*University*

11. Nsukka Here I come!
I recall writing this on my question paper after the English language part of the JAMB in 1981. In those days we took the first three papers, took a break, and came in for English. Nsukka was a tough place with a tough reputation. It was a serious era. I was in for a five-year programme. We had stability from Year One till a few weeks to our final examination. Universities shut down I believe, the year before we came in, and never for once closed all through my stay, but for the very end. We returned after some weeks, and that was it. We had a date for our final examinations, and our degree papers (then we had five examination papers, one a day Monday through Friday, each lasting three hours, that were 50% of your entire stay at the university). That was decisive. People moved from examination halls to the medical centre. Someone would look at the ceiling in the examination hall, and throw his pen up, shouting, “See Methane”, “See Butane”. Nsukka in that period had what I consider a good school should have; A school should make you kinetize your potentials, make you discover yourself. From my class alone has emerged at least seven professors (Eze CC of FUTO, Jude Mbanasor of MOUAU, Okey Alimba of EBSU, Ini Akpabio of UNIYO, Andrew Iheanacho of UNIMAID/UAM, Peter Onoh of FUTO). The number of stars I see across Nigeria, who were in Nsukka fully or partly between 1980 and 1987 is significant. And across disciplines, too.

12. We had teachers from across the globe. Not limited to the white women our brothers married who returned with them and were lecturing in Nsukka then, I recall that my ecology lecturer was a white French man. We had Kahn, Singh and Ghatpande, who were Asians. From 100 Level Mathematics and Biology, right up to final year finance classes we had non-Nigerians. There was the universe in our university education. There were American peace corps people. The First and Masters degrees in Nsukka were serious matters. A week after the first-degree examination we had the project examination with the external examiners. Results were known the week after. Department, Faculty and Senate met within a week and our names were pasted at the Central Potters Lodge the day after. There were no handouts. If you got into any students’ hostel room, you would find a book shelf with books relevant to his/her discipline displayed. When the session/term (we did not have semesters then), commenced we returned to school promptly. We were not forced back to school nor forced to buy books. We were proud and happy to buy, read and show-off our books. Students, especially female students never spoke pidgin. Never would you find a lecturer speaking pidgin. All our lecturers spoke good English. Our lectures were not book sellers. Results were pasted publicly after examinations in June. By August you would know if you have passed or failed any course and if you were to come for “September conference. Results were available before resumption early in October. I don’t know how our lecturers did that, but our generation of lectures cannot. We did not go from lecturer to lecturer to see results.

*Primary, Secondary teachers and University Lecturers then and now*

13. They had dignity. In our villages the Headmaster was an important person and by protocol would rank either number one but certainly not lower than number three, in the community. They were respected. Today our primary school teachers are products of NTI, and indeed some have university degrees but many may not be asked by the villages to be secretary at the village meeting, as no one trust the ability of the teacher to write correctly what has been discussed.

14. In many cases teachers have been shown to be unable to pass primary school level tests. Governor Oshiomoles’ video with a teacher unable to read an affidavit/oath she swore to, and submitted is a case in point. Another is a state that issued tests to primary school teachers of whom only 15% made at least 50% in primary four examination questions for the term. As we saw in Kaduna state not too long ago, the NUT insists that teacherswho cannot read nor write should be retained. To do what?
Education / Re: Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:13am On Jul 25, 2020
*Secondary School*

8. I passed the Lagos State Common Entrance examination and was set for Igbobi College. I also passed the East-Central State commonEntrance examination, and had my name in the Renaissance Newspaper, and was posted to a certain Obube Secondary School, which my parents did not know where it was. One day my father announced that I will return to the East-Central state for secondary school, and it would be Obube. I wept. And I wept for four years, as my school mates often tease me about. Obube secondary school on the outskirts of Owerri, located long the Owerri-Aba old road (the current road was done about 1978), was built by the Roman Catholic Church, but was also taken over by the East-Central state government after the civil war. It has been returned not too long ago to the church. I arrived Obube late after my class mates had settled in. I did not know anyone I met in Obube prior to arriving there. No student and no teacher. I was the youngest in class. I recall at least one of my classmates Ambrose Ekeh, would punish me, asking me to kneel down or raise my hands. He was much bigger. I wept because all the boys I knew in Lagos or elsewhere, family friends who were in the East were elsewhere. In Form Two my mother tried changing me to a school were my father’s friend (Mr. Udumaga) was Principal. The day I was set to leave for school, my father returned and took me back to Obube. By then my father had been transferred to Enugu. He did agree in Form Three to move me to CIC Enugu. I had everything set including school uniforms, but one morning, he changed his mind and took me back to Obube. In Form Four I tried to convince him by showing him that the WASCE result for Obube was not very good, he wouldn’t agree and I returned to Obube. By the end of that year, I was made Library prefect, so I suppose I couldn’t try changing in Form Five (the final year). Form Five would be the year I truly accepted and enjoyed my years in Obube. In effect every year for four years I wanted to be changed to another school but my father insisted otherwise. One of those schools I so much wanted, had the School certificate result for the year I sat the final WASCE cancelled. Sometimes you can’t help but believe that fathers are seers.

9. At Obube we had a stern Principal Mr Davidson Emeruwa. He loved us, and was so passionate about our studies and the need for us to excel. He had zero tolerance for examination malpractice. He was a disciplinarian. He could flog the entire class and more any morning/day he found reason to. We had teachers like Mr. Briton (White British man). We had class mates from all over East-Central state, Rivers state (now Rivers and Bayelsa) and Southeast state (now Akwa-Ibom and Cross River), and more. One term, a certain Mohammed appeared in our class. We learnt his father was a recently posted soldier (or so) to Owerri. That term, Muhammed came first. Muhammed was very brilliant in nearly all subjects especially mathematics.

10. Obube had certain traditions, some of which pre-dated Mr. Emeruwa’s coming in my Form Two in 1976, and most of which he generally kept. One of such was who would be prefects especially Senior Prefect or Deputy (typically class prefects all along with obvious leadership qualities especially ability to obey rules and get his peers obey). Very predictable were Health/Sanitation prefects (Neatest boy in his clothing and appearance and his beddings), Sports Prefect (best footballer/team captain), Religion Prefect (You know him when you see/meet him), and the Library Prefect, nearly always would be the person who tops this class, except where he had attributes which recommend him for Senior Prefect or Health or Religion. So the Library Perfect had a burden to perform excellently in the WASCE. I recall the day prefects were announced late in Form Four as the Form Fives were rounding-up the WASCE. The junior classes seemed more excited as the Principal called out the names. From their reaction, it seemed they expected Chinedum Nwajiuba to be Library prefect. About a year and three months after, when my set’s WASCE results were announced, Chinedum did not disappoint.
Education / Are Our Public Universities Going The Way Of Our Public Primary And Sec. Schools by naijareferee: 9:12am On Jul 25, 2020
*Are our Public Universities going the way of our Public Primary and Secondary Schools?*
By

Chinedum Nwajiuba

*Introduction*

Please keep aside the office I currently occupy as you read, and hopefully think about this. I am a Nigerian citizen reflecting on my country. My primary and secondary schooling were entirely in Nigeria, For the university, the Bachelors and Masters were in Nigeria, and then the Doctoral was in Germany.
In addressing the question used as title, I wish to bore you with some stories, somewhat trivial. Please, just patiently bear this. It also might help, you never know.

*Primary School*

1. At the end of the civil war in 1970, we returned to our village primary schools, taken over by the state government from the missions. Mine was the St. Matthews Church school, which the East Central State Government had taken over, and which later became Umuehie Primary school. We had no classroom seats. We sat on the floor, under the Mango tree. Our teacher (just one per class) rested the blackboard on the Mango tree. We cleaned our blackboard with charcoal or with the leaves of Siam Weed, also called “Awolowo” or “Elizabeth” but the botanical name is Chromolaena odorata, long referred to as Eupatorium odoratum).

2. We learnt the alphabets. We learnt arithmetic. Our teachers came to school before 8 am every day. We lined for morning assembly. We were taught, we played, we had class assignments which we did on our slates, made of flat wood. Our teachers drew lines of white, blue and red on the blackboard to teach us how to write upper case and lower-case alphabets, how to start sentences, and how to end. Our teachers did not hold university degrees. They mostly passed through Teacher Training Colleges.

3. Our Teacher marked our assignments in class, we went home proudly with a long Good Mark in red colour, but some got a huge X Bad Mark. If you had the GOOD MARK, you carried it home proudly.

4. One day on our way home from school, proudly carrying my slate home to show my parents, my cousin Ebere, who was older, took my slate and flung it into a densely forested place. We couldn’t find it. I got home and told my mother, who was a teacher and had been teaching me at home during the war, and she said I shouldn’t bother with that and that henceforth I will go to school with pencil and exercise books to write, and not slate anymore. I had been learning with pencil and paper at home. From the next day, I became the only person in Primary One writing with pencil and paper.

5. At the end of the term, results were announced publicly at an assembly of all pupils. Those who came in the top Ten were announced. The last Ten were also announced. People sat up. People worked hard to retain their positions or do better. We had incentives to excel. We felt a sense of achievement or shame as the case may be.

6. After the first term, the Headmaster, Mr. Onuoha decided I should not be in Primary One, but should move to Primary Two. I was about the youngest in Primary One, so you imagine me in Primary Two. I got home with the good news, but my mother would not have any of that. She was in school the next day and insisted that I must continue in Primary One. I guess the Headmaster did not like that, and I suspect that was why, one day, I was late to school, he flogged me more than other late comers.

7. Eventually I left for Lagos. I reported at the Mainland Nursery and Primary School, this time a private school in Surulere. I was tested and immediately sent to Primary Two. That means my village school at the end of the war was not inferior to my private school in Lagos. But my aunty Comfort, insisted I should be in Primary One. Among my teachers at Mainland was Mrs. Ekaete, a white Briton, who I believed owned/headed the school, Mr. Ojo, a Ghanaian, and then a Togolese who taught French, a few of those I can remember.
Business / Re: FG Mulls Unified Naira Exchange Rate Regime by naijareferee: 3:03pm On Jun 18, 2020
Even South Africa rand has been made to float and hence quoted as an emerging currency pair with the USD on forex.
UK ditched this exchange rate defence since 1992, why are we still defending this naira.
I know if allowed to float, inflation will get out of hand... That's where monetary policy of our cbn heads will come into play... But alas, it's just okay to fluctuate the naira and make money for a few...
We will have sense someday

1 Like

Politics / The Matter by naijareferee: 6:05pm On May 30, 2020
The matter way lord lugard give us...
Na Im we day settle since 1914....
Politics / Re: AfdB: Peter Obi Declares Support For Adesina by naijareferee: 6:47pm On May 29, 2020
Rotentik19:
Yoruba led the campaign against her candidacy... But a Yoruba president gave her the opportunity to serve the country. When Nnamdi Kanu was arrested, two prominent Yoruba men stood surety for him... I think the Igbo are the real problem of the south. Always preaching hate & division. As far as the Igbo is concerned, everything must be "tribalised" even the minority in the south are not comfortable around the Igbo. It's a shame.

I thought you guys disowned obj...
Didn't vote for him and preferred falae...
My initial post was not to drag tubal sentiment... But to promote good ideals

3 Likes

Politics / Re: AfdB: Peter Obi Declares Support For Adesina by naijareferee: 5:33pm On May 29, 2020
smallsmall:



Please stop spreading this sort of lies and unverified claims, it damages the moral fibre of our country.
Assuming but without conceeding that it is true, you should not be repeating it publicly but discouraging it passively.
Yorubas did not lead any campaign against N O I, the White people (Europeans and Americans conspired against her because she is Black!)

All these stoking of one ethnic tribe against the other in Southern Nigeria needs to END, it is the biggest obstacle against our development and the biggest weapon of our oppressors. THINK! THINK!! THINK!!!

Have you forgotten the petition to withdraw Ngozi honorary degrees?
Internet does not forget

9 Likes

Politics / Re: AfdB: Peter Obi Declares Support For Adesina by naijareferee: 5:31pm On May 29, 2020
MENELIIK:


These ridiculous stories by the Ibos is becoming disgusting! Stop reading PM news and be informed. During the June 12 election, the Ibos did not vote for Abiola, Arthur nzeribe led the Association of Bastard Nigerians who called for the annulment. If I ask you to justify your claims now, you will start your usually cock and Bull stories. Haba!

Ibo had two states then and abiola got about 75 percent from anambra and about 50 percent from IMO, what else do you want. Even though abiola boasted that he didn't need igbo votes.
And the ibb has come out to state who influenced the annulment, yet you find a convenient scape goat. Continue...
We don't support oppression, hence our continued voice against oppressors...
Look what how we voiced out for southern Kaduna people... Who have to spoken for before?

7 Likes 1 Share

Politics / Re: AfdB: Peter Obi Declares Support For Adesina by naijareferee: 4:58pm On May 29, 2020
mrvitalis:

They would never learn

Time reaches all a lesson or two.
Injustice to one is injustice to all.
Igbo have forgiving everybody, but have they forgiving igbo.

2 Likes

Politics / Re: AfdB: Peter Obi Declares Support For Adesina by naijareferee: 4:49pm On May 29, 2020
Ngozi okonjo contested for world bank presidency, Yoruba's led the campaign against her candidacy... But we have showed unalloyed support to Adesina... I hope we all are learning one or two lessons

65 Likes 8 Shares

Politics / Re: I Never Knew Onitsha Had A Large Body Of Water. Thought SE Was Landlocked? God! by naijareferee: 12:18pm On May 06, 2020
Throwback:
That you do not even understand what it means to be landlocked within the present Nigerian boundary, shows you are an illiterate that needs to be educated.

Is there any Igbo state or Igbo town that borders any neighboring country, thereby part of Nigeria's international boundary? No!

Is there any Igbo state or village that is bound by the sea, thereby exiting as an international delineation? No!

You say your villages exit to a River. Will you sail from that river and continue into Non Igbo territory because the river exits into the sea? What stops the Nupe, Berom, and Igala from sailing the same river from further upland and trying to pass through Biafra and eventually into Non-Igbo territory so as to access the same sea?

You are landlocked because by the time your miniature 5states were to secede from Nigeria, without the alliance of the Ikwere or other non-Igbo tribes that have access to the sea, you will be totally locked within Nigeria just like Lesotho is locked within South Africa.

Look at the map below, and see how trapped you are. I know it feels choking.

Simply put, you will be at the mercy of Nigeria.
I believe ebonyi has a boundary with southern cameroun... I stand corrected
Health / Re: Nairaland Online Convid19 Diagnostic Centre by naijareferee: 2:58pm On Mar 31, 2020
AdaNonye:
I've had a hot chest since yesterday morning and cant sleep. No blocked nose,fever and the likes. It's making me worried.

I am not a doctor, but I can tell you that panic kills faster than the virus itself.
Calm yourself, sip a cold drink and relax.
Health / Re: Nairaland Online Convid19 Diagnostic Centre by naijareferee: 3:57pm On Mar 30, 2020
naijareferee:
Fellow country people, you all can bear witness to the slow and sometimes ineffective testing centres in the country. In this face of this, I have decided to create this thread for all those who have symptoms but can not confirm of its convid19 or not to present their symptoms for possible analysis and advice by 'qualified physician' or someone who has had the virus in the past but recovered.
Thank you.
PS.
Some early symptoms of convid19 include, but not limited to,
1. Frequent coughing
2. Fever
3. Nasal irritation that might affect respiration
4. General body aches

Let's be our brothers keeper!

Cc. Seun, lalasticlala... Let's save some lives
This is for advisory purpose and 'help' if possible until you find succour
Health / Nairaland Online Convid19 Diagnostic Centre by naijareferee: 3:55pm On Mar 30, 2020
Fellow country people, you all can bear witness to the slow and sometimes ineffective testing centres in the country. In this face of this, I have decided to create this thread for all those who have symptoms but can not confirm of its convid19 or not to present their symptoms for possible analysis and advice by 'qualified physician' or someone who has had the virus in the past but recovered.
Thank you.
PS.
Some early symptoms of convid19 include, but not limited to,
1. Frequent coughing
2. Fever
3. Nasal irritation that might affect respiration
4. General body aches

Let's be our brothers keeper!

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