Nickxtra's Posts
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queensera:Why wouldn't life be good for her after dem don knack am good s*x? |
She wants to start her own showcasing like Tboss? |
efilefun:Dangote already has an existing 5 year tax for a different project already agreed to with the previous government. The present government only added another 5 years to make it 10 years. |
rentAcock:Kolo mentality unlimited |
sarrki:So, he getting is matured now, you mean? |
Man Becomes An slowpoke After Impregnating His Daughter (Photo) .ng Sep 9, 2017 1:00 PM A Nigerian man has been mysteriously struck with imbecility after many years of sleeping with the daughter in Kwara state. It was a tragic story that started much earlier, when, John Oyewo, the 67-year-old resident of Manfile community in Upper Gaa Akanbi, Ilorin in South Local Government Area of Kwara State, and formerly married to one Yetunde, separated from her to marry another woman, by name, Feyisayo, in 1992. Between Yetunde and John, they had a girl, Esther. Then 15, she would go to stay with her dad, and her new wife, now her stepmother who was a businesswoman and was often away from home. One thing led to another and in the course of the visits, an illicit love affair started between father and daughter. How it started She recalled the genesis of the sordid affair. “My father came home one night. I was fast asleep when he woke me up and asked if I had had my bath. I said no. Then he asked me to bathe with him and I joined him innocently. While in the bathroom, he started touching my sensitive parts. Irritated, I Initially resisted him but when I could no longer hold it I became aroused and responded to his touching. We had it right there in the bathroom. Later, it became a constant thing. I was afraid but because I had nowhere to go, I endured it.” The incestuous relationship resulted in Esther’s first pregnancy. She later gave birth to a child who died shortly after birth under mysterious circumstance. Still the shameful affair continued. The innocent girl got pregnant for her dad the second time and had another child who they christened Oreoluwa. Reward of sacrilege This time around family and relations felt that they had had enough of this nonsense and sent father and daughter packing from their midst by way of communal ex-communication. That was how the duo left the family house to settle in their present abode at Manfile area in Upper Gaa Akanbi. But while there, the second child who was hale and hearty and had started walking about, suddenly took ill and died. As if that was not enough ordeal, the father became afflicted with imbecility and left home never to be seen again, till today. As you read this, only God knows where he is. To compound it all, Esther, now 39, has been afflicted with a strange illness the nature of which she would not want the public to know. But a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) is assisting her, she said.Abode In tears, she said to Saturday Sun: “I thought what I was doing then was right not knowing I have committed a great crime that has ruined my life.” Read more on: http://www..ng/news/man-becomes-slowpoke-impregnating-daughter-photo
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“My wife is a witch, she appears and disappears using her wonder-working powers,” 58-year-old businessman, Olarenwaju Moruf, told an Igando Customary Court in Lagos on Thursday. The man, therefore, urged the court to terminate the 17-year-old marriage, saying “I am no longer interested in the relationship as the love I have for her has faded.” He accused his wife, Fatimot, who had a child for him, of witchcraft. “There was a day my wife appeared physically to me in my hotel room when I travelled to the northern part of the country for a job, I shouted and she disappeared. “She keeps appearing and disappearing whenever good things are coming my way. She once appeared to me and my promotion letter turned to sack letter. “Everywhere I went for a solution, I was told that my wife was behind my predicament and I strongly believe it because I am also a witness to her devilish acts,” he said, accusing his wife of belonging to a cult. Moruf added:“There was a day I came home unexpectedly to pick what I forgot, I caught my wife holding a meeting with a cult member. “Fatima brings strange people into our matrimonial home, including a teenager whose father is a herbalist. Apart from the witchcraft allegation, the man also said his wife had been threatening to poison him. Fatima, a 47-year-old trader, however, denied the allegations, saying “I am not a witch.” “I am not the one behind my husband’s predicament, my hands are clean; I do not belong to a cult, I am a committed Muslim.” The respondent pleaded with the court not to grant her husband’s request to dissolve the marriage, insisting“I still love him.” The court’s President, Mr Adegboyega Omilola, adjourned the case until Nov. 2 for further hearing. |
My sister, this one they are sending to do in the ocean like mummy water is too dangerous for a young lady like, especially if u are not "strong" o. As madam "sakobi" and the girl that acted pot of life in those years. |
dainformant:Is it Naija movie scene or for real? |
lafflaff123:I can see that you don't understand Nigerian politics. Kindly abstain from commenting on political matters. |
From the thoughtless vituperations of Gov. Wike, I think the motive of marking the deceased Inspector to be killed by him, is because he spearded the invasion of the Election collation centre which has so far helped the APC in reclaiming their mandates thru the courts. The killing is a political killing. Quote me if you like. |
I can see Friday in these pictures. HAPPY for him o! Finally, after about 8-10 years in AAU as a student, he finally scaled through. Senseless ruggedity and stubborn showmanship no dey pay. na lesson for him and others sha. |
This land does not look Edo land at all. |
What is this one yearning? |
continued. .. NEGOTIATING THE SYSTEM . General Buhari was elected president in 2015 because the electorate felt Nigeria needed someone to deal with the security situation, the Boko Haram insurgency, as well as save it from its oil dependency. However, if the oil price goes back up to US$80 a barrel we will revert to type, that is a lack of economic complexity. My advice to Buhari before he became president was to think strategically about how to manage his government. It is my view that you cannot avoid working with politicians who are crooked, because they have follower ship and votes. Instead you have to think strategically about where they can be placed to have minimal negative impact. At the same time you need to identify key ministries and positions where you want your leaders with character to be. Rather than becoming embroiled in confrontation, efforts should be made to negotiate a way of working within the existing system. For example, the political class in Nigeria is funded and run by people importing petrol and diesel. Nigeria will never address its power generating issues until the government starts negotiating with these people, because if the issue is solved, they will be put out of business. Instead ways need to be found to allow them to invest their money into the development of a power sector. It is not an ideal solution; but it could be a workable one. As an example, private individuals are building their own refineries; should they negotiate with government we can have working refineries to meet the needs of the Nigerian people. In all of this there has to be a better relationship forged between executive, judiciary and legislature; you cannot reconcile without negotiation. However negotiation does not happen frequently enough in Nigerian politics. Planning for the future. While some of the political class call for a new constitution as a pre-requisite for restructuring and development, others believe that this is a political point-scoring exercise revived close to elections and meant to distract rather than to promote good governance in the country. The federal structure is not the reason why questions are not being asked by State Houses of Assembly about state and local government. Nor is it the reason why we have abandoned our responsibilities in different aspects of governance. But it is the easiest thing to blame. It is like saying that I did not pass my exams because the questions were wrong. Nigeria’s governance problems are a lot to do with institutions and the character of those running those institutions. Corruption is a problem, yes, but it is a consequence of a bigger issue. When I was appointed Speaker I was given about 20 special advisors to support my work. Some of them did next to nothing, so I returned five and handpicked mentees who I knew were competent, determined and ambitious. By the time I left office in 2011 one was a senator, two were in the House of Representatives and one was a minister. Bringing individuals into the system to begin changing things from within is what I hoped for. You cannot take on the National Assembly, the judiciary or every criminal, so you need to zero in on what is important and what can have the biggest long-term impact. In Nigeria, it’s about succession plans and getting the right people in the right jobs. Those who can, and will, make a lasting impact on the education sector, for example a university or a school. The thinking has to be strategic. The President should identify those who can be trusted with the leadership of key institutions in 10 years’ time and should be readying and preparing them. The problem is that most politicians in Nigeria are not interested in thinking about the long haul; they see politics as a 100m sprint. Dimeji Bankole |
In 2003 I was elected to the House of Representatives to serve the Abeokuta South constituency, in Ogun state. My eight years in elected office made me less optimistic about change in Nigeria, but more realistic. The political system was not designed to allow people like me – a 37 year old from the private sector who had studied in the UK and at Harvard – to become Speaker of the House of Representatives, the role I held from 2007 to 2011. Nevertheless, I was able to work within the system successfully and make a difference, so imagine the impact 20 or 30 influencers across the different arms of government could have on changing things significantly. A coalition of the willing. Soon after I was elected Speaker, President Yar’Adua came to the National Assembly and announced that only 40% of the 2007 budget’s capital expenditure had been implemented, repeating a pattern that had been ongoing since the return to multi-party democracy in 1999. The question that I wanted answered was: what happened to the remaining 60%, especially when we did not have a financing shortfall? I went to President Yar’Adua and said I wanted to look into the issue of unspent funds not being returned or accounted for in the following year’s budget. He advised that pursuing the matter would incur a backlash, but that if I was ready for it he would support me. I chose to use internal channels to exert pressure rather than starting a public discussion in the media. The latter might have gained nationwide interest but would have done little to make reform happen. A strategy that had the buy-in of relevant stakeholders, people who could actually make change happen, was important. I refused to sign the 2008 budget for four months until unspent funds from the previous year were accounted for and returned. Eventually, over ₦450 billion came back, which in previous years would have been lost. People knew what was going on, even at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. They chose to look the other way. In 2009, when the President announced how the budget had performed, he also indicated the return of ₦300 billion in unspent funds. This was a marked shift in how things were done. In total, during my four years as speaker, ₦1.3 trillion in unspent funds were returned. If you can forge a coalition with key stakeholders involved in the system and the process, reform from within is possible. During my tenure, the Fiscal Responsibility Act and the Freedom of Information Act promoting transparency and good governance were signed into law. However, when President Goodluck Jonathan succeeded Yar’Adua, the coalition did not hold. House reports of unremitted funds in their trillions, reports on the power probe, and the Petroleum Industrial Bill forwarded to the executive were not acted upon. Without Yar’Adua to provide protection, I was forced out of office. In the six months following my departure, the petroleum subsidy scandal emerged, where ₦248 billion was originally budgeted but ₦2.5 trillion had been spent by the end of 2011. The excess crude account of US$22 billion in 2011 had been depleted to US$2.2 billion by 2015. It was against this backdrop that The Economist declared that Jonathan ran “a clueless government” and was “an ineffectual buffoon who let politicians and their cronies fills their pockets with impunity”. . |
A housewife, Olayemi Ajetunmobi, on Thursday told an Idi-Ogungun Customary Court at Agodi in Ibadan that her husband, Taofeek, hated her because of her inability to read Qur’an and pray in Islamic way. Olayemi’s husband, Taofeek, had approached the court for the dissolution of his 19-year-old marriage blessed with three children, citing wife’s insincerity and lack of cooperation. Olayemi told the court that she agreed to convert to her husband’s religion 19 years ago before the marriage, but could not cope with Islamic doctrines. “I cannot read Qur’an or observe the daily five prayer times and other Islamic rites, but I go to church without the knowledge of my husband. “I lied to my husband that I did not attend any church,” she said. She pleaded with the court not to grant the request of her husband, saying “I still recognise him as my husband”. Taofeek also described his wife as a talkative and that his relationship with her was full of “deceit and insincerity”. “I do not want any ugly occurrence because I have a hot temper; we have been living together like cat and rat since last year. “The court should uphold my request so that peace could reign and both of us could live happily in our respective locations.” The President of the court, Chief Mukaila Balogun, leading other members — Aare Samotu and Ganiyu Alao — granted the dissolution of the marriage and awarded custody of the first two children to the husband and the third child to the wife. Balogun ordered the petitioner to pay N4,000 as monthly allowance to the respondent for the upkeep of the third child. The court also ordered the petitioner to pay N12,000 and N5,000 as house rent and packing allowance respectively to the respondent. Source: Vanguard. |
Even Tontoh Dike! That lady enhen |
really pathetic. ....She was orphaned at the age of 10 years when the abuse started. So, what is her age now? |
Pivot:Okay, but it should be clear from your post |
Will the baby now grow up to be a babalawo? This Gani Adams of a man when. |
celebsnestblog:What a bundle of contradiction! 1. A director at Lagos state internal revenue service. 2. Also an Assistant director at Federal Inland Revenue Service. The two positions until her death.. how possible? Anyway, RIP, pretty woman. |
celebsnestblog:What a bundle of contradiction! 1. A director at Lagos state internal revenue service. 2. Also an Assistant director at Federal Inland Revenue Service. The two positions until her death.. how possible? |
Is that wedding ring? ......Is she a married "girl"? |
obafemee80:Number 1 is Exactly what am experiencing. Is it repairable/serviceable? |
shedy03:What is ur reason? |
Oliviaxx:Get us a lighter story, pls. |
hatchy:True talk |
In a stranger than fiction case, a married woman asked a Magistrates Court to withdraw two counts of r*pe cases against a man who defiled her, as she falls in love with him. A 22-year-old woman identified as Talent Zvenyika, from the Featherstone area of Zimbabwe, has last week approached Chivhu Magistrates Court in the country to withdraw two counts of r*pe against a man, William Chiocha who defiled her on two occasions, claiming that they were now in love with each other. According to a report by Tell Zim, 38-year-old Chiocha was set free after Magistrate Fadzai Mutombeni withdrew the case after the plea. Zvenyika claimed that after the r*pe incidences, she had fallen in love with the alleged defiler as they had enjoyed consensual s*xual intercourse on several other occasions and they had asked each other for forgiveness. It was gathered that Chiocha arrived at Zvenyika’s homestead with his young brothers around 15:00 hrs and proposed love to her but she rejected saying she was married. Chiocha later returned later on the same day and found the complainant asleep with the door not locked as her husband, Billa Luckmore Gijima, had not yet returned from a football match. He began to pester the complaint again on his love proposal before going to her bed where he allegedly defiled her once. On another day, Chiocha once again approached Zvenyika around 19:00 hrs in her kitchen hut where she was preparing supper while her husband was at a beer drink. He then grabbed a screaming Zvenyika by the shoulders and pulled her to the back of the kitchen door and r*ped her. The complainant waited till early September 2016, when she divulged the r*pe ordeals to her husband after realising that her husband’s friend, Ozias Dzaramba had not told him as she had asked him to. On September, 16 2016, Gijima reported the case at Charter Police Base. “I am not the one who reported the case to the police. Although I did not consent on the first and second times, we later on indulged in consensual s*xual intercourse on several other instances after we asked each other for forgiveness for previous cases. We are now in love and therefore the case can be withdrawn,” Zvenyika told the court.
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AYM Ashafa Petrol station at Tipper Garage, Bwari Road, Dutse, Abuja, sells @ 141.50 per litre |
She is the one of them.......I mean the Tontodike class |
overall90:Yes, in the write up, the woman rightly said that the barber (or the brother...emphasis mine) must have told some people in the street that started making jest of her. |
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