NMotorwerks's Posts
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Yes you can OND just being minimum. We are locted in Agidingbi, Ikeja tessyg2: |
Still Searching! NMotorwerks: |
Still Searching! NMotorwerks: |
Nationwide Motorwerks[i][/i] is a limited liability company specializing in vehicle maintenance, service and repairs. We deploy technology in solving automobile problems and our technical expertise in helping our customers ensure timely, quality, cost-effective servicing for their vehicles. We are in need of an Account Manager/Admin. to oversee the business office. Qualification: At least OND in accounting or business administration, Experienced in accounting principles and able to use accounting software. Good interpersonal skills and a team player,Must be honest, dependable, able to work independently without supervision and a smart worker. Detail oriented with good organizational skills and must be dedicated to duty. Schedule is Mondays to Saturdays. Reward: N40,000.00 Per Month Apply only if you qualify for the above: nationwidemotorwerks@yahoo.com or Call 0816-752-9768 |
I don't think you are serious, I emailed you this last year with no reply. |
NMotorwerks:Reply please |
How much will it cost to clear 2006 Jaguar XJ8 accidented with popped airbag shipped roro |
You cannot sue this company, your motive of making money out of this is wrong, your focus should be on quality improvement not extortion. No injury has been done to you as well because you are yet to consume the drink, therefore you cannot sue and win on that ground. The only way 7Up will give you money could be to avert negative publicity. |
OyiboPrincess, where u dey, 9ija or America? |
Collapsing oil prices are dealing a crippling blow to Africa's economic giant, Nigeria, which is simultaneously absorbing a second shock: U.S. refineries once purchased as much as 40% of its production; now they're no longer buying. Is this financial crisis injecting some sobriety into Nigeria's notoriously corrupt elites? Hardly. In the latest reports of misspent national treasure, millions of laundered dollars are apparently lubricating President Goodluck Jonathan's reelection campaign. Voting is this month. Nigeria's in-your-face corruption was never sustainable; with Boko Haram militants razing whole villages in the north, its dire consequences are only intensified. For security reasons as well as ethical ones, the United States should stand by its anticorruption rhetoric, applying sanctions and other leverage against members of what many have called Nigeria's most kleptocratic administration. Nigeria: Where corruption and insurrection go hand in hand. At a meeting with traditional leaders last month, the governor of the southern state of Edo vented his exasperation over fishy numbers provided by the Nigerian federal government. He and other officials were told that oil revenue owed to the states was being used to bring down the price of kerosene, a basic fuel for Nigerians. “But your highnesses,” he countered, “there is nowhere in your various domains where kerosene is being sold for [only] 50 naira. So in the name of subsidy, large sums of money are being stolen.” Such findings (and others) prompted then-Central Bank of Nigeria Gov. Lamido Sanusi to submit a memorandum to the Nigerian Senate a year ago, pinpointing gaps and illegalities in the oil accounts that left the nation with a shortfall of about $20 billion over 18 months. Spending to subsidize kerosene — for which there was no allocation in the federal budget and whose effect was not reflected in retail prices — totaled about $6 billion. When Sanusi directed his examiners to trace the money, he was suspended. In the last two years, Jonathan has curbed the once proud central bank, appointing to its board an in-law, a close family friend and a former subordinate of the petroleum minister. A Western diplomat described that minister to me as “Jonathan's ATM.” The bank's governor, Godwin Emefiele, and a deputy governor, Adebayo Adelabu (also Jonathan appointees), previously managed banks reportedly under scrutiny by Sanusi for laundering the missing oil money. From the police to the registrar of public deeds to the nursery school teacher, too many government officials encountered by Nigerians demand to be 'settled' with a payoff. In the meantime, a source “close to” a Nigerian bank told local news media that his establishment transferred more than $56 million to Jonathan loyalists “outside due process,” primarily to rent campaign supporters. “Some people who were hired to come to the rallies are complaining that they did not receive the money promised them. The politicians want to pocket all” of it, he said. In another deal, the nation's equivalent of the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing took out a $21-million loan at a staggering 22% interest rate to buy equipment supposedly to print ballots for next month's election. Emefiele is also chairman of the bureau, and the loan came from the bank he used to run. The bureau did not have the contract to print the ballots. An Emefiele spokesman has denied any hanky-panky. Nigerian governement leaders and governors, or commanders, are accomplice of BokoHaram, and receive their part of lootings and slave trade. According to numerous civil servants I've interviewed, public procurement invoices are often grossly inflated. “When it comes to a job that attracts money,” a defense ministry IT worker told me last year, “only the director and the deputy director have knowledge of the real terms of the deal.... If it's 10 million, the director says, ‘Make it 12 million.” Procurement will say, ‘Make it 15 million.' And the permanent secretary says, ‘Make it 25.'” Given the nation's plunging revenue, such tales of corruption are shocking. Every Nigerian is hurt by the lack of investment in schools, healthcare, agriculture and basic infrastructure, not to mention bullets for the military — and by the corrosive culture fostered by high-level larceny. From the police to the registrar of public deeds to the nursery school teacher, too many government officials encountered by Nigerians demand to be “settled” with a payoff. Many see in such practices the genesis of the biggest threat to Nigeria's security: Boko Haram. “Boko Haram initially had the principle of kicking back against the corruption of the state,” says Kemi Okenyodo, director of an organization that advocates for justice-sector reform. Indeed, at first, Boko Haram went after the police — notorious for abuse — and other government offices. Only recently have attacks on civilians been predominant. For Muhammed Tabiu, former bar association chairman in the city of Kano, radicalization in the Muslim north is driven in part by “a search for a solution to corruption; you can't get a fair deal. You have to bribe.” First, Tabiu says, came a push for sharia law. But when that failed to deliver change, some sought more radical solutions. U.S. officials have begun speaking out about the threat posed by corruption. But actions have lagged behind words. The intelligence community does not systematically analyze corruption. The Foreign Service Institute, which trains U.S. diplomats, has no mandatory course on it. And sanctions are typically imposed only on countries that are already pariahs, such as Russia or North Korea. Regarding Nigeria, Washington continues to pledge counter-terrorism support, without a public word to Jonathan about the missing billions, even though the collapse of U.S. demand for oil puts American officials in a good position to exert leverage. Jonathan's finance minister gets a regular Washington platform to paint rosy pictures of her country's economy. The oil minister has not been sanctioned despite those gaps in the revenue she is supposed to be depositing in government coffers. And dodgy Nigerian banks retain correspondent relationships with U.S. counterparts. It's up to Nigerians to decide this month what kind of leadership they want for their country. But if American officials truly mean to address the root causes of terrorism — as both President Obama and Secretary of State John F. Kerry have proclaimed — a good place to start would be with corruption. Sarah Chayes, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment and a contributing writer to Opinion, is the author of "Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security."
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Boko Haram slaughter up to 2,000 people as they raze 16 villages to the ground in raids across north-east Nigeria that have forced thousands to flee their homes Boko Haram have seized Nigerian town of Baga and 16 neighbouring towns Military retreated following the attack which has killed up to 2,000 people Eyewitnesses said bodies were left lying in the street as residents fled Nigerian government says troops are fighting back and launched airstrikes Boko Haram has killed up to 2,000 people in the northeast Nigerian town of Baga in the past two days, their second killing spree since seizing control there over the weekend. Locals said the insurgents began shooting indiscriminately and burning buildings on Tuesday evening in several raids targeting the civilian population that carried on into Wednesday. Dead bodies were left in the streets following the bloody assault by militant Islamists, eye witnesses said. Soldiers protecting the town, which has a population of 10,000 fled on Saturday after militants attacked the town's military base. Nigeria's government today said troops had begun a fightback against Boko Haram. The militants first attacked Baga, in the north of remote Borno state, on Saturday and on Wednesday set fire to the town and razed at least 16 towns and villages nearby. Mike Omeri, who speaks on national security, said security forces had been 'actively pursuing the militants' since the first attack and after the second. 'Security forces have responded rapidly and have deployed significant military assets and conducted airstrikes against militant targets,' Omeri told reporters in Abuja. Boko Haram has been waging a five-year insurgency to carve out an Islamic state in northeastern Nigeria. Local officials in and around Baga told AFP on Wednesday that at least 20,000 people were forced to flee their homes and that 560 had been stranded on an island on Lake Chad since Saturday. Omeri said the country's emergency management agency was helping 2,000 people displaced from Baga, while other agencies, including the Red Cross, were ready to assist when security allows. Boko Haram has for the last six months captured dozens of towns and villages in northeast Nigeria as part of its aim to establish a hardline Islamic state. The Baga attack effectively gave it control of all three frontiers of Borno state with neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, increasing fears of cross-border attacks. Security analysts this week said that the militants were now in a better position to strike south towards the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, where the group was founded in 2002. It has also cast doubt on the ability to hold general elections in the affected areas, scheduled for next month. Musa Alhaji Bukar, a senior government official, told the BBC that fleeing residents told him that Baga was now 'virtually non-existent', adding those who fled reported that they had been unable to bury the dead, and corpses littered the town's streets. Nigeria's government maintains it is on top of the situation, despite repeated claims of a lack of military presence in the region and complaints from soldiers about inadequate weapons and kit. Omeri condemned the latest attacks as 'brutal and barbaric' and said they represented 'none of the people of Nigeria and no religion'.
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There should be no reason to fight each-other, let the insurance handle the repair. At least every car should have third party insurance as required by law. Should a reckless drive hit your car, all you need to do is to collect their insurance information, take a picture and pursue the insurance. Be civil, no need to fight, if you fight, you could be charged with assault and battery. |
Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, has accused his predecessor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, of spending N50m on beds in his and his wife's bedrooms in the newly built Ekiti State Government House. He claimed in a statement made available to journalists in Ado-Ekiti on Tuesday that what was spent on the two bedrooms, their toilets and bathrooms was in the region of N100m. The statement titled "N3.3bn new Government House Is Fayemi's Show of Wickedness To Ekiti People," was signed by his Special Assistant on Information and Social Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka. But Fayemi, through his media aide, Olayinka Oyebode, said the allegation was more about The Comedy of Errors. He advised Fayose to stop the theatre of absurd. The statement by Olayinka described the new government house as an act of insensitivity to the plight of Ekiti people, many of whom, could not afford to feed once in a day. According to the statement, no progressive-minded Ekiti person would see the "out-of-this-world luxury" provided with over N3.3bn borrowed funds for Fayemi, his wife and children and will not weep for the state and its people. It claimed that the bed on which Fayemi slept before he left government was N30m while that of his wife was over N20m. The statement read in part, “Between Fayemi and his wife, what was spent on their bedrooms, toilets and bathrooms will be in the region of N100m. “How can a responsible government use borrowed funds to provide this kind of luxury for the governor and his family alone in a state where a lot of people cannot afford to feed more than once in a day? “People should ask the former governor what was really wrong with the abandoned governor’s lodge used by his (Fayemi) predecessors? “Shouldn’t such funds expended on the hilltop edifice have been used to resuscitate the moribund textile factory in Ado-Ekiti that was turned to lock-up shops to provide employment for our teeming youths? “Also, was Fayemi living in that manner of opulence before he became governor? Was he sleeping on a body-massaging bed and bathing in an electric-controlled Jacuzzi? “Here is Fayemi, who could not pay workers salaries, owing them two-month salaries before he left. A Fayemi, who out of sheer wickedness refused to pay pensioners N2.4bn pension and gratuities; N400m workers leave bonus, N700m subventions to parastatals and tertiary institutions and remit N2.4bn four months’ cooperative society’s deductions from workers salaries preferring to use N3.3bn borrowed funds to provide luxury for himself, his wife and children alone. “This is wickedness!’’ The statement quoted Fayose as being alarmed at the waste of Ekiti resources to provide comfort for a single family out of the thousands of households in the state. It added, “The governor would have preferred to sell out the property and use the fund to provide basic amenities and employment opportunities for the people.” The statement also alleged that Fayemi was planning to buy a helicopter if he had returned to office for a second term because the plan was for him “to run government from the comfort of Oke-Ayoba Government House and move from there to anywhere he wanted without the people seeing him.” It added, “That’s also the reason he (Fayemi) refused to renovate the Governor’s Office, leaving it in a state of disrepair because he knew that he was not going to use the office during his second term. “Also, contract for the maintenance of the property was already awarded for N150m per annum. “When we visited the Government House for the first time yesterday, Mr Governor was like; how I wish I can sell off this place or turn it to commercial use? It is simply wicked for a governor to be more interested in this manner of ostentatious comfort at the expense of the people.” Fayose, according to the statement, wondered “if the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, whom Fayemi and his so-called progressives claimed as their role-model, lived in any government house, much less of building an Emperor-like house for himself.” “Did the late Adekunle Ajasin build a monarchical government house for himself? Did Baba Lateef Jakande live in any government house? These are great Yoruba sons, who recorded landmark achievements as premier of the old Western Region and governors of Lagos State and the old Ondo State respectively. “The duo of Ajasin and Jakande were able to impact tremendously on their states because they did not like to waste public funds on the provision of luxury for themselves.” The statement said that “left for Governor Fayose, he won’t use that aristocratic government house because it is a symbol of oppression in itself.” The statement added, “He(Fayose) will prefer to live where Ekiti people can easily see him, touch him, eat with him and discuss the progress of the state together. “But abandoning it would amount to colossal waste of public funds; but Governor Fayose will not hide himself from the masses.” Fayemi’s media aide, however dismissed the allegation by Fayose, saying “I have taken a guided tour of that place and I don’t think I have seen such an outcry. “I don’t know where they got their figure from; it sounds absurd. I ‘ll advise them to stop this theatre of absurd. Governance is a serious business and I am appealing to them not to reduce it to a joke. “They are turning Ekiti into a circus show and they should stop it. It is childish and puerile for them to have come up with that figure. There is nothing ostentatious about Dr. Fayemi’s lifestyle: the lodge is there as a property of the state. “Whether Fayose stays there or not is his cup of tea. The new government house is a legacy building. Dr. Fayemi did not go with it to Isan-Ekiti; it is for the state. It is not about personal aggrandisement; it is a befitting edifice for the state. Go to other states of the federation and see their government houses. Ekiti state deserves the best.”
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Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, has accused his predecessor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, of spending N50m on beds in his and his wife's bedrooms in the newly built Ekiti State Government House. He claimed in a statement made available to journalists in Ado-Ekiti on Tuesday that what was spent on the two bedrooms, their toilets and bathrooms was in the region of N100m. The statement titled "N3.3bn new Government House Is Fayemi's Show of Wickedness To Ekiti People," was signed by his Special Assistant on Information and Social Media, Mr. Lere Olayinka. But Fayemi, through his media aide, Olayinka Oyebode, said the allegation was more about The Comedy of Errors. He advised Fayose to stop the theatre of absurd. The statement by Olayinka described the new government house as an act of insensitivity to the plight of Ekiti people, many of whom, could not afford to feed once in a day. According to the statement, no progressive-minded Ekiti person would see the "out-of-this-world luxury" provided with over N3.3bn borrowed funds for Fayemi, his wife and children and will not weep for the state and its people. It claimed that the bed on which Fayemi slept before he left government was N30m while that of his wife was over N20m. The statement read in part, “Between Fayemi and his wife, what was spent on their bedrooms, toilets and bathrooms will be in the region of N100m. “How can a responsible government use borrowed funds to provide this kind of luxury for the governor and his family alone in a state where a lot of people cannot afford to feed more than once in a day? “People should ask the former governor what was really wrong with the abandoned governor’s lodge used by his (Fayemi) predecessors? “Shouldn’t such funds expended on the hilltop edifice have been used to resuscitate the moribund textile factory in Ado-Ekiti that was turned to lock-up shops to provide employment for our teeming youths? “Also, was Fayemi living in that manner of opulence before he became governor? Was he sleeping on a body-massaging bed and bathing in an electric-controlled Jacuzzi? “Here is Fayemi, who could not pay workers salaries, owing them two-month salaries before he left. A Fayemi, who out of sheer wickedness refused to pay pensioners N2.4bn pension and gratuities; N400m workers leave bonus, N700m subventions to parastatals and tertiary institutions and remit N2.4bn four months’ cooperative society’s deductions from workers salaries preferring to use N3.3bn borrowed funds to provide luxury for himself, his wife and children alone. “This is wickedness!’’ The statement quoted Fayose as being alarmed at the waste of Ekiti resources to provide comfort for a single family out of the thousands of households in the state. It added, “The governor would have preferred to sell out the property and use the fund to provide basic amenities and employment opportunities for the people.” The statement also alleged that Fayemi was planning to buy a helicopter if he had returned to office for a second term because the plan was for him “to run government from the comfort of Oke-Ayoba Government House and move from there to anywhere he wanted without the people seeing him.” It added, “That’s also the reason he (Fayemi) refused to renovate the Governor’s Office, leaving it in a state of disrepair because he knew that he was not going to use the office during his second term. “Also, contract for the maintenance of the property was already awarded for N150m per annum. “When we visited the Government House for the first time yesterday, Mr Governor was like; how I wish I can sell off this place or turn it to commercial use? It is simply wicked for a governor to be more interested in this manner of ostentatious comfort at the expense of the people.” Fayose, according to the statement, wondered “if the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, whom Fayemi and his so-called progressives claimed as their role-model, lived in any government house, much less of building an Emperor-like house for himself.” “Did the late Adekunle Ajasin build a monarchical government house for himself? Did Baba Lateef Jakande live in any government house? These are great Yoruba sons, who recorded landmark achievements as premier of the old Western Region and governors of Lagos State and the old Ondo State respectively. “The duo of Ajasin and Jakande were able to impact tremendously on their states because they did not like to waste public funds on the provision of luxury for themselves.” The statement said that “left for Governor Fayose, he won’t use that aristocratic government house because it is a symbol of oppression in itself.” The statement added, “He(Fayose) will prefer to live where Ekiti people can easily see him, touch him, eat with him and discuss the progress of the state together. “But abandoning it would amount to colossal waste of public funds; but Governor Fayose will not hide himself from the masses.” Fayemi’s media aide, however dismissed the allegation by Fayose, saying “I have taken a guided tour of that place and I don’t think I have seen such an outcry. “I don’t know where they got their figure from; it sounds absurd. I ‘ll advise them to stop this theatre of absurd. Governance is a serious business and I am appealing to them not to reduce it to a joke. “They are turning Ekiti into a circus show and they should stop it. It is childish and puerile for them to have come up with that figure. There is nothing ostentatious about Dr. Fayemi’s lifestyle: the lodge is there as a property of the state. “Whether Fayose stays there or not is his cup of tea. The new government house is a legacy building. Dr. Fayemi did not go with it to Isan-Ekiti; it is for the state. It is not about personal aggrandisement; it is a befitting edifice for the state. Go to other states of the federation and see their government houses. Ekiti state deserves the best.”
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Politics without bitterness is what we need in our leaders.
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Please How much is the cost of trucking and shipping through Jacksonville from Copart in Miami. Thanks |
lanredo: Mini flat |
I stand by the facts above, check your Title or car document and make the correction otherwise this would be termed a fraud! |
Are you sure this is a 2001, the last year this body-style was manufactured is 1995! See the 1996 C-Series and 2001 C-Series respectively! Your car is not a 2001 Model!
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Pataki: Ekiti - elebi people!You are full of shit for saying that!
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John 11: 3-4 So the sisters sent word to Him, saying, "Lord, behold, he whom You love is sick." 4But when Jesus heard this, He said, "This sickness is not to end in death, but for the glory of God, so that the Son of God may be glorified by it." I can see you being healed and restored in Jesus name (Amen)
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An American doctor infected with the Ebola virus has arrived in the U.S. for treatment. A plane carrying Dr. Kent Brantly arrived in Atlanta from West Africa about 11am Saturday morning. The private jet was outfitted with a special, portable tent designed for transporting patients with highly infectious diseases arrived at Dobbins Air Force Base in Marietta, Georgia, just outside Atlanta. Dr Brantly was then transported about 15 miles to Emory University Hospital via motorcade.
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I need a paint booth, could you email me the prices and how to land it in Nigeria. Email: nationwidemotorwerks@yahoo.com |
Fayemi started this rice business! Period cgeorge: From the office of those who contributed immensely towards the rice project.
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APC leaders are just taking people for granted, their allegation of rigging is an isult to a common Ekiti man who freely gave their mandate to the candidate of their choice. Are they saying that Ekiti cannot and should not decide who rules them? I bet you, if they continue with this furous charges, their leaders would be physically chased out of Ekiti, they have the antecedent.
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You are myopic and warped in your thinking, no matter how you look at it, the students and faculty there will gain a lot from this world re-known figure. Convenant is on the right track and the goal to be among the world's best should be lauded. SLIDEwaxie: u need prayers too. |
More Pictures
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You can contact me @ nationwidemotorwerks@yahoo.com for this 2007 G55. I can help facilitate the purchase and get it to you ASAP.
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Buy Me! |
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