Oghene1st's Posts
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LILTJAY:Next time, if you want to use ellipsis, it is 3 dots and not 2 dots. |
LILTJAY:It is obvious you are not good in written English. More reason your quotes are like abbreviations or replies to close questions when the questions are open. Sorry, you are too low academically to further take my time. Ciao. |
LILTJAY:How many sporting stadiums are in southwest? |
LILTJAY:Okay. Oya controvert my claim |
LILTJAY:State the place you stayed, and for your information, I'm in Abk - Abeokuta residing in Isabo. |
LILTJAY:There are cities better than every cities in South West aside Lagos that you all hope on. There is no street begging in South South compared to your next-of-kin title to Northern Nigeria on street begging based on statistics. There is agriculture - Palm and Cocoa. There are more sea ports in South - Warri, Cross Rivers, Akwa Ibom and Rivers than South West. Every State in South South has access to the sea unlike South West. There are tourist attractions. Obudu Cattle ranch is an example. There are more airports in South South than South West. There is a better good road network in South South than South West. There are more sporting facilities in South South than South West. There is access to clean water in South South than the whole of South West. There is water scarcity in most part of South West. There is a better wildlife in South South than South West. Better aquatic life in South South than South West. There are more developed towns in South South than South West There are more cities in South South than South West Better and greener forests in South South than South West. Better landscape in South South than South West. We don't patronise money ritual like you guys. Should I continue? |
Sammy07:I.T? Is IT in South West or in Nigeria? Are you referring to the IT completely imported into Nigeria? From hosting to platforms for web designs, to storage, to communication, etc? Which IT sir? Banking? Okay support that with facts. Entertainment is arguably dominated by the Yoruba of South West, I won't contest that. Manufacturing and medicine need to be supported with convincing details. BTW, how did the above you mentioned made you become the economic backbone of Nigeria as against my topic stating that South South is the economic backbone of Nigeria? I provided facts to support my topic. So, if you want to counter it, please do with quantifiable instances on why South West is the economic backbone of Nigeria. If your arguement is on another issue incidental to the topic, probably from subsequent quotes/comments under the topic, state it and we shall proceed, but that is when I'm done with lectures. |
Sammy07:Mr. Sammy, I am in a lecture hall for now, will revert back to you soonest. |
YorubaIsGreat:When did I say it was the South South that is leading in education? I only said the South South is currently topping the South West in education. Check my comments so far, and you will affirm this. You people don't know how to argue, then couple with your bad english grammar here on this forum. Simple English sentences, you guys can't construct. |
Nisiw365:It is the South East that is leading in education presently. Stop fooling yourself. |
Nisiw365:This one na real ekpa. Happy sunday! |
Nisiw365:I'm supporting my own claim with facts, you are telling me to support your claim with fact. How stupid you are. Why not bring in your facts to support your claim? Ekpa. |
Nisiw365:Admissions into law in Nigerian universities between 2011 and 2015 were led by Imo, Anambra and Delta states, according to JAMB figures. The three states were the most consistent of all top performers for the five years. They also dominated medicine and were amongst leading performers in engineering admissions — the three courses being amongst the most competitive in Nigerian universities. Earlier analyses by PREMIUM TIMES, using data from the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, showed that medicine and engineering were dominated by mostly South-east, South-west and South-south states. North-central states of Kwara and Kogi also made a good showing. But for law, there is a new member of the pack: Benue state, which delivered a positive but brief performance in 2011 by coming fourth behind Imo, Anambra and Delta. That year, the four states were followed by Ogun, Rivers, Abia, Edo, Osun and Enugu. Ogun appeared thrice in the top cadre in the five years, coming fourth in 2011, third in 2014 and second position in 2015. Benue made it to the top three in 2011 before it dropped below the top 10, while Rivers made it to the top four in 2012, top three in 2013 before it dropped to eighth position in 2011 and 2014. It made the top seven in 2015. The data are for students admitted through test-based examinations conducted by JAMB. JAMB’s admission process is guided by merit, university catchment area and gives advantage to educationally-less developed states. For law, while Imo had 739 students admitted into various universities in 2011, Anambra followed with 679 and Enugu was third with 593. Benue came fourth with 558 and Ogun was fifth with 488 students. In 2012, some of the states again made the top five. Imo emerged first with 551 students, Delta followed with 476 and Anambra came third with 469, Rivers came fourth with 447. That year, Abia placed fifth with 355 students admitted into Law. In 2013, positions changed significantly, with Delta taking the first position with 683 students. Imo dropped to second with 630, while Rivers came third with 569. Anambra was fourth with 490 and Edo , with 463, took fifth. Anambra jumped to first position 2014 with 452, Delta dropped to second position with 430, Ogun jumped to third position with 418. Osun was fourth with 381 and Edo took fifth with 373. In 2015, Delta again took the first position with 456 students. Ogun dropped to second with 419 while Imo dropped to third position with 415. Enugu was fourth with 363 and Osun took fifth. ⓘ For the first time in five years, Anambra slumped to sixth position. Generally, the number of admitted law candidates fell compared to engineering and medicine. Hassan Soweto, who coordinates a civil rights group, Education Rights Campaign, suggested one reason why admission into law faculties in Nigerian Universities has been falling is cost. According to him, in most federal and state universities, students studying law are asked to pay tuition fees larger than what is charged for arts and social sciences. Mr Soweto said law education is gradually being “commodified and commercialised”. “When the cost of law school is also taken into consideration, law education is rapidly becoming the preserve of the few rich. This ugly phenomenon will continue to be the case until public education is properly funded such that regardless of whatever course students apply for, access is opened to anyone whether they come from poor or affluent backgrounds,” he said. The states with the least number of students admitted into law were FCT, Yobe, Zamfara and Jigawa. FCT had the smallest number for four years with only 29 students admitted into Law in 2011. It had 14 students in 2012, 27 students in 2013, 20 students in 2014 and 19 students in 2015. In 2011, Yobe had 25 students, followed by Zamfara with 39 students. Katsina had 50 while Gombe had 51 students. In 2014, Zamfara had 19 students, Sokoto had 32 students, Jigawa had 39, and Katsina had 41. In 2015, Zamfara had 28 students, Jigawa had 33 students, Kebbi had 45 and Bayelsa had 47 students. https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/272805-jamb-report-reveals-states-leading-in-law-admissions.html |
walemoney007:I'm from Delta Central. |
Nisiw365:Should I give you the one of law and engineering to finally finish you? |
Nisiw365:With more universities opening across the country in the last decade, the number of students gaining admissions into specialised and competitive degree courses has steadily grown. But when it comes to Medicine, four states have dominated admission trends for at least five years, consistently trouncing the other 32 states and the Federal Capital Territory. The states are Imo, Anambra, Delta and Enugu. Between 2011 and 2015, these states had more students gaining admission to study Medicine than any other state, data from the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) show. In the five years, the four states — except Anambra — remained in the top five, an analysis of the data by PREMIUM TIMES has shown. Anambra took second position for four years, before dropping to sixth position in 2015. Only two other states managed to break into the top five briefly. Osun took fifth position twice and fourth position once; while Edo took third position once, and fifth position once. The data, covering 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015, are for students admitted through test-based examinations conducted by JAMB. JAMB’s admission process is guided by merit, university catchment area and grants advantage to educationally-less developed states. The JAMB data were verified and validated by the National Bureau of Statistics, the bureau said. Together, they provide an important glimpse into how the nation’s 36 states and Abuja compete when benchmarked by university admissions into various academic disciplines each year. ⓘ PREMIUM TIMES analysis is focused on three of the most competitive courses: Medicine, Engineering and Law. In follow-up reports, this newspaper will evaluate the trend in Engineering and Law. For Medicine, while Imo had 1,940 students admitted into various universities in 2011, Anambra followed with 1,536 and Enugu was third with 1,280. Delta came fourth with 1,137 and Abia was fifth with 931 students. In 2012, the four states again made the top five. Imo emerged first with 1,841 students, Anambra followed with 1,473 and Delta came third, while 1,305, Enugu came fourth with 1,247. That year, Osun placed fifth with 958 students admitted into Medicine. Imo continued its leadership of the chart in 2013 with 2,395 students admitted to study Medicine, while Anambra again followed with 1,645 and Delta came third with 1,618. Enugu came fourth with 1,422. Fifth position was snatched by Edo with 1,256 students. In 2014, Imo had 1,588 students, Anambra followed with 1,511; Delta came third with 1,170, Enugu came fourth with 1,161. Osun reclaimed the fifth position with 1,146. ⓘ In 2015, positions changed significantly, with Delta jumping to first position with 1814 students. Imo dropped to second with 1,727, while Edo came third with 1,510. Osun was fourth with 1,447 and Enugu, with 1,390, took fifth. For the first time in five years, Anambra slumped to sixth position. Hassan Soweto, who coordinates a civil rights group, Education Rights Campaign, said the admission pattern reflects the funding of education in the country. Mr. Soweto assessed the states doing better as “one-eyed kings in the land of the blind”, saying even they have poor funding for education. “It means that some states are doing a bit better while some are doing poorly in the midst of crisis because it does not mean the sector is well funded,” he said. https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/261340-exclusive-jamb-report-reveals-four-nigerian-states-leading-medical-education-five-years.html |
Nisiw365:Should I give you a recap of Premium times investigative journal about states that dominated admission into engineering, law and medicine? You want data? |
Nisiw365:See this one. There is no data that has exposed the number of professionals per zone. Stop bragging for what you can't prove. It is the professional bodies that can only provide accurate figures and they haven't done that. So stop. |
gidgiddy:Same bullshit talk. |
Nisiw365:Recent data has shown that South South topped the West in education. You are living on past glory. South South is educated and has enough professionals. We are heading NBA, ICAN, President of World Commonwealth Medical association, etc. How did we get there, as illiterates? |
greatiyk4u:South South is least developed? Where are you hiding brother. If not for Lagos that is making the South South not to top South West in development, South West won't have the capabilities to go head to head with South South. The least developed in South is South East. The least developed in Nigeria is North East. |
In that 1.8m barrel daily, 1.4m is from the South South. That is 1.4m multiply by $90 which equals $126m, over N60b is the revenue generated by Nigeria from South south oil daily. Then one idiot Yoruba boy abi Yorubas will come to say South West is the economic backbone of Nigeria. South South is the one feeding all you hungry zones. THE price of Nigeria’s Bonny Light, yesterday, surged further to $91.38 per barrel, from $90.31, recorded the previous day, indicating an excess of $29.38 against the $62 per barrel benchmark of the nation’s 2022 budget. The leap in price was attributed to a combination of factors, including the declining oil inventory, due mainly to rising demand driven by the reopening of businesses after many months of Coronavirus lockdown. Consequently, Nigeria, which budgeted to produce 1.8 million barrels daily and between 300,000 – 400,000 barrels of Condensate, which also attracts high premium like Bonny Light, expects to generate much revenue into its Excess Crude Account, ECA, a special account established to hold oil revenues in excess of the budgeted benchmark. Meanwhile, there were fears that the rising crude price could push petrol subsidy to about $16 billion per day. https://www.vanguardngr.com/2022/01/rising-crude-price-pushes-petrol-subsidy-to-n16bn-per-day-2/ |
In that 1.8m barrel daily, 1.4m is from the South South. That is 1.4m multiply by $90 which equals $126m, over N60b is the revenue generated by Nigeria from South south oil daily. Then one idiot Yoruba boy abi Yorubas will come to say South West is the economic backbone of Nigeria. South South is the one feeding all you hungry zones. |
Whether Osinbanjo or Tinubu contest nai contest from Southwest, dem go still lose. North continues in 2023. A proud South southerner. |
luwiizy:They revere it in Orogun. It is a traditional practice by the people. |
techWriter3:Okay |
Obagreatdatoye:No need to remove Lagos, I have said it earlier that the revenue generated by FG from oil in south south is more than the revenue generated by all states of the federation in a fiscal year. Try and get any statement of cashflow of the FG in year 2020 - 2021 and study the cash receipt (revenue) section. Let me try if there is a way I can get it and upload it for you. Then if you wish to remove Lagos State, your region is nowhere near North Central or North West not to talk of South South. |
Ttalk:LoL. At this junction, I will stop replying your quotes. I have concluded that you have nothing to offer in this argument. Your raise issues but without facts in support. If you check my comments, you will notice that whatever claim I make, I support them with facts for you to controvert but for your case, you just open your mouth waaaa, close it and then go into hiding. Why not mention the areas administered by FG as capital in Lagos? No need to respond to the question because you are not sound enough for this argument. Look for your fellow bird in this platform to argue with. |
Slayar:I hear you. |
Ttalk:Where did I say only Aworis are the indigenes? Check my comment again. I only said Awori own Lagos, this is to the effect that they are the majority tribe in Lagos. Look at my comment again, I said has Awori or an indigene of Lagos ever become the Governor of Lagos State. So you don't know why I included 'or an indigene of Lagos?' You are truly educated. From the most educated tribe in Nigeria. |
Slayar:I have always been saying that Abuja and Lagos are the same thing. Every state and tribe has a stake in both. Is Abuja not North? Go to the High Court of Abj if you won't see southerner as a judge and staff. South southerners are in various positions in bodies set up for the development of FCT - Abuja. What else is a stake? Is a Northerner a judge in any of high court of the states in south south? Do you actually understand what is called stake? |
Ttalk:If not for Lagos, South West has no economic viability nor development strides enough to go head to head with South South. It is Lagos that is the saviour of South West, all thanks to all Nigerians. |

