Politics › Nigerian Govt Must End Police Attacks On Subsidy Protesters -amnesty Int by okadaman2(op): 11:21pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
Nigeria urged to end police attacks on fuel protesters
“The police have a duty to protect lives and property and uphold the rule of law. It is therefore completely unacceptable for them to use live ammunition against protesters,” said Paule Rigaud, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for Africa. “The Nigerian authorities should respect and protect peoples’ rights to freedom of expression guaranteed by the Nigerian constitution, and should instruct the police force to refrain from shooting at protesters,” she said. Under a controversial regulation, known as “Police Force Order 237”, police officers can shoot at rioters or protesters whether or not they pose a threat to life. The regulation directs officers to fire “at the knees of the rioters” and explicitly prohibits firing in the air.
“Force Order 237 is being abused by police officers to commit, justify and cover up illegal killings at every given opportunity. This regulation goes against international standards and should be repealed immediately,” said Paule Rigaud. Thousands of Nigerians in cities across the country have taken part in marches protesting against the removal of a state fuel subsidy, which has seen fuel prices and transport fares double. Civil society groups and labour unions have announced further protests on 9 and 11 January. “With more protests coming up, it’s essential that the Nigerian police publicly announce that the use of lethal force is only allowed when strictly unavoidable to protect life. This simple step could make a big difference to the number of unlawful police killings we are seeing in Nigeria,” said Paule Rigaud. Amnesty International has documented numerous incidents of excessive and unlawful use of force by police and other security forces, especially during demonstrations. http://www.amnestyusa.org/news/news-item/nigeria-urged-to-end-police-attacks-on-fuel-protesters |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 6:20pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
jason123: Happy new year to you to Oga! Hope your okada business is not to affected by Our president. Business is so so, my poor customers are now trekking, I feel sorry for them but I have new ones now; Those who previously rode their private cars to work now patronize me. Guys, we must understand that GEJ has OUR best interest at heart but the timing,the lack of confidence from the public and the failure to implement some policies led to what we are seeing today. GEJ is certainly not Nigeria's main problem, but he's not addressing the foundational issues. clearly out of his depth. . . |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:51pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
jason123: That is obvious and that is why the attempt to tribalise the issue will fail. It must fail, else the consequences will be grave for us all. Burundi/Rwanda will be child's play. . . Happy New year Jason. |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:49pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
From twitter: @MoFame_: Hahahaahaha a protester just asked me "bros dem nor go allow us shoot gun small?" Lol #benin #occupynigeria lol |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:44pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
[quote author=alj_harem link=topic=839387.msg9901807#msg9901807 date=1325780834]LOL but on a serious note, after this Protest become sucessful, we nigerians have to come together again to fight for Niger-delta precisely baleysa, rivers and delta states from the Oil companies.[/quote]I totally agree. The Niger Delta is one of the most marginalized places in Nigeria, probably on earth. . and that is saying a lot because most of Nigeria outside of the corridors of power is marginalized. What we need to constantly guard against are the few sellouts in the ND hiding under the canopy of Amnesty, gangs, Pseudo-militancy and "Oil bunkering" dollars while the rest of their people suffer. Yes, They have equivalents in all regions too. |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:23pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
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Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:12pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
dmainboss: [size=16pt]south south is not protesting. Who cares about anything? Who cares what happens to you and Nigeria. We are not interested. get it in your thick skull. We want the country split. Are you too daft to understand that? What concerns us concern you? Why would we want to subsidize your lazy unproductive as.se.s? Go back to your state and start producing something instead of asking for free beer? Ewu!!![/size] It's ok I support your desire for an equitable split. When you are ready hit the streets, let us know. . GEJ is in power now sef, so what are you waiting for? Or is GEJ against the split your people want sooooo badly? If he's against it then why are you supporting him sir  . Abi una don sacrifice the Niger Delta Revolution on the altar of Greed and amnesty dollar??  Una wan wait make amnesty money finish shey??  |
Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:05pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
More from Benin today. . .
the message in this one is the core of the issue for me. .
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Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 5:05pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
Benin Protests. . .
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Politics › Re: Pictures Of Protest In Benin City South-south by okadaman2: 4:52pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
dmainboss: [size=15pt]I just came back from Benin Yesterday. There is no protest anywhere. You shouldn't spread lies just to push your point. There is nothing wrong with protesting but what you are posting are lies. There was no protest in Benin. Benin is as peaceful as anything. Most people in the south south are not interested in protesting against removal of subsidy. They are only interested in a split of the country![/size] Your obvious lies about Benin aside. . When will you and your goons propose a split of the country? when GEJ leaves power? Or when amnesty money finally runs out? Your post from yesterday: dmainboss: I Just spoke to a friend in PH this morning and asked him how the subsidy protest is going and he laughed and said, it is the poor guys in Lagos that are protesting. He said GEJ has empowered boys in ND and they dont have time for protest. He said the guy that used to paint his office and house told him he no longer has time for that because he now collects 150k monthly amnesty pay. He just came back from SA for training. Boys are smiling in Niger Delta and they dont have time for any yeye protest. It is time for the south west to fight it out. When Ojukwu was shouting his voice hoax over 40 years ago, they said he was a f00l. Some still come here and insult him.
Let them fight it out. It is their turn now. This is not the fight of the SE or SS. We are watching. When we see the terrain is clear, we will act. No more free beer. That era is gone. Boys are driving around with big machines in PH. No time for yeye protest. |
Politics › Re: Occupy Nigeria: Updates From Across The Nation by okadaman2: 4:14pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
Keep them coming Alj Harem
We need to lock down every houses of assembly in Nigeria.
Every altar of political and public corruption must be occupied and shut down till GEJ starts firing people, till GEJ sends a bill to the HOA seeking to peg federal political pay at allowances to an acceptable level, we shall #Occupy
They can remove subsidy but we cannot continue to subsidize security votes.
Every day for the Thief, one day for the owner, that day is almost here. . . it's just warming up. |
Politics › Re: Min Of Information Labaran Maku To Hold Tweet Meeting At 12pm by okadaman2: 3:14pm On Jan 05, 2012 |
Mukina there are so Many brilliant questions he chose to ignore. Post those ones too If you can. |
Politics › Re: Soon, We Shall All Be Trekking- Reuben Abati by okadaman2: 6:02am On Jan 05, 2012 |
One of these days, we shall start stoning the economists in official corridors - Abati in 2009 |
Politics › Re: President Goodluck Jonathan Called An Emergency Meeting Of His Cabinet by okadaman2(op): 2:58am On Jan 05, 2012 |
@elrufai A Protester at d Liberation Sq in kano just confirmed d attack is still on.Police shooting live bullets& tear gas! It's 2:28am now” So we understand that GEJ and his thuggish police force are now shooting live ammunitions at peaceful protesters in Kano. . . . Warn your looter parents, there may be blood. It is still stoppable. |
Politics › President Goodluck Jonathan Called An Emergency Meeting Of His Cabinet by okadaman2(op): 6:59pm On Jan 04, 2012 |
If your father is in Government, or your mother is a looter With access to those in power, Better start advising them to tread easy. The long-suffering, oppressed Up-NEPA Generation may not stop until they draw blood, massive fat rich blood. History is your friend. Advice the looters in your family. Once these benign looking protests cross the threshold of peaceful, tolerant screams, God save us all. There is still time. Happy discussion FEC. BTW luxurious bus rides for a few people are no palliatives. Time is running out. There may be blood. Nigeria Cabinet to Hold Emergency Meeting Over Fuel Protests By Elisha Bala-Gbogbo and Chris Kay
January 04, 2012 10:26 AM EST Facebook Twitter
(Updates with comments from analyst starting in fourth paragraph.)
Jan. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan called an emergency meeting of his Cabinet today to discuss the goverment’s scrapping of subsidies on fuel, Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu told Channels Television.
The Nigeria Labor Congress and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria are scheduled to meet today to set a date for a strike involving “tens of millions” of people, NLC Secretary-General Owei Lakemfa said by phone in Abuja. One protester was shot and killed by police yesterday in Ilorin, the capital of the central state of Kwara, he said. Protesters marched in the market area of Yaba in the commercial capital, Lagos, as long lines of vehicles formed around fuel stations.
Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil producer, abolished 1.2 trillion naira ($7.5 billion) of subsidies on Jan. 1. That’s likely to more than double the price of unleaded gasoline to 140 naira a liter (0.26 gallon), according to the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency. Nigeria imports most of its fuel because of a lack of refining capacity.
“By removing the subsidy abruptly, instead of phasing it in with a price band, for example, and by failing to prepare popular opinion, Jonathan has introduced the right reform at the wrong time and in the wrong way,” Ashley Elliot, an Africa analyst at London-based Control Risks, said in an e-mailed response to questions. Gasoline Prices Rise
Jonathan appointed Christopher Kolade, former high commissioner to the U.K., to head a new board created to oversee the spending of funds previously used for gasoline subsidies, the government said Jan. 2.
About 64 percent of Nigeria’s population, which the government puts at more than 160 million, lives on less than $1.25 a day, according to data from the United Nations. Fuel stations in Lagos run by the state oil company, Nigerian National Petroleum Corp., sold gasoline yesterday at 138 naira per liter. In Abuja, Forte Oil Plc stations in the center of town were selling gasoline at 139.8 naira per liter.
“Cheap petrol is viewed by many Nigerians as the only tangible benefit they receive from the state, hence the widespread anger,” Elliot said.
The West African nation imports 70 percent of its fuel products due to a lack of adequate refining capacity, Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke said on Nov. 22. Nigeria has paid 3.65 trillion naira in domestic fuel subsidies since 2006, with more than a third spent in 2011, according to the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency. The government spent 1.35 trillion naira in the first nine months of last year, PPPRA chief Reginald Stanley told a parliamentary hearing on Dec. 2.
Nigeria’s inflation rate stayed above the central bank’s 10 percent in November, remaining unchanged at 10.5 percent. Nigeria expects inflation of 9.5 percent and economic growth of 7.2 percent this year, Jonathan said in his Dec. 13 budget speech.
--With assistance from Emele Onu in Lagos and Maram Mazen in Abuja. Editors: Karl Maier, Nasreen Seria To contact the reporters on this story: Elisha Bala-Gbogbo in Abuja, Chris Kay in Abuja http://mobile.businessweek.com/news/2012-01-04/nigeria-cabinet-to-hold-emergency-meeting-over-fuel-protests.html |
Politics › Subsidy Removal; How Not To Run A Country by okadaman2(op): 1:53pm On Jan 04, 2012 |
. . Last year, during and after the April elections, this young columnist, Tolu Ogunlesi while writing for 234next expressed some optimism about the GEJ presidency and the election that brought him to power. Although fair and critical then, he did acknowledge the need for some continuity just like Seun of Nairaland advocated during the elections. From this new article it appears that 9 months into the GEJ Administration, Tolu is not very impressed with President Jonathan especially his attempt at reforming the economy on the back of poor Nigerians while the few 1% looters roam free in the corridors of political and economic power. Brilliant piece BTW. Enjoy! By Tolu Ogunlesi
President Jonathan is not doing anything unusual, others before him have made similar arguments asking for “sacrifice”. The only thing that ends up getting sacrificed is the future and wellbeing of tens of millions of suffering Nigerians.
I remember watching Goodluck Jonathan’s telepromptered presidential bid declaration speech on 18 September, 2010. He promised change: “Let the word go out from this Eagle Square that Jonathan as President in 2011 will herald a new era of transformation of our country…”
He also succeeded in pulling an ‘Obama’ on us: “I was not born rich, and in my youth, I never imagined that I would be where I am today, but not once did I ever give up. Not once did I imagine that a child from Otuoke, a small village in the Niger Delta, will one day rise to the position of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I was raised by my mother and father with just enough money to meet our daily needs. “In my early days in school, I had no shoes, no school bags. I carried my books in my hands but never despaired; no car to take me to school but I never despaired. There were days I had only one meal but I never despaired. I walked miles and crossed rivers to school every day but I never despaired. [I] didn’t have power, didn’t have generators, studied with lanterns but I never despaired.”
Inspiring story. The canoe-carver’s son who became Deputy Governor, Governor, Vice President and then President without ever hustling for power, wowed us all, with his humble beginnings, his humility and his accessibility (via social media).
But that was then. Today the canoe-carver’s son seems bent on recreating, for present and future generations, all the obstacles he faced all those decades ago. He seems eager to ensure that as many Nigerians as possible study with lanterns and survive on a single meal a day. And how is he doing this – by hitting the most vulnerable part of the population where it hurts them the most – via what is no doubt one of the most ubiquitous items in the land: petrol. The seeming disconnection from reality, for a man who boasted of being born without shoes, is shocking. Nigeria is a country full of poor people. Nigerians consume more fuel than necessary because their country continues to produce, for its 150 million citizens, a tenth of what South Africa produces for its 50 or so million citizens – and they therefore have to depend on petrol-guzzling Chinese generators to keep the lights on.
Controlling the price of petrol has therefore been the easiest way to ensure that Nigerians enjoy the benefits of the crude oil they produce in copious amounts. But in the spirit of the Nigerian system, the country is largely unable to refine crude oil, and therefore has to import most of its fuel needs. The subsidy system is constructed around this importation: Government pays importers to ensure prices are kept reasonably low. Over time, as expected, trademark Nigerian corruption has crept into the system, and dubious importers have found ways of inflating their receipts. Last year, the government spent 1.3 trillion Naira on subsidies, instead of the budgeted N248 billion. The government has admitted the existence of a ‘cartel(s)’, but has done nothing to confront it, or attempt to expose it. The only solution, they’ve argued, is to scrap the entire subsidy, the only thing that resembles ‘welfare’ in a land teeming with poor people.
Against all opposing voices they have gone ahead to scrap it, in the most callous of ways: On New Year’s Day, via a press statement by an obscure government agency (quick joke: “What’s the difference between Boko Haram and GEJ? Boko Haram at least claims responsibility. GEJ gets PPPRA to do so on his behalf.”) – in a country that is one of the world’s top 10 producers of crude oil. Instantly, fuel prices more than doubled, triggering panicky queues at fuel stations and a rise in transport prices. Over the last couple of weeks Mr. Jonathan has been meeting with labour, civil society, and youth groups, ostensibly engaged in a dialogue. In reality, Mr Jonathan has apparently only been buying time for the implementation of a policy he and his advisors had made up their minds about a long time ago.
On 31 December, the President went on national TV to announce the imposition of a state of emergency in parts of the country, as part of the government’s response to the growing menace of terrorist group, Boko Haram. Not a mention of the impending removal of the subsidy. On the afternoon that news of the subsidy removal filtered out – New Year’s Day, and a Sunday – a post appeared on the president’s Facebook page, a list of his achievements in 2011. Again, not a mention of the subsidy.
Nigeria’s “numbers” have always been mind-boggling. Saudi Arabia, with less than twenty percent of our population, currently has a refining capacity of more than 2 million barrels per day, more than ten times Nigeria’s. Billions of dollars have gone into ‘Turn-Around Maintenance’ on our four refineries over the last two decades. Today, none of those refineries operates at up to fifty percent of its full capacity (the actual numbers are much less than that). The government has not demonstrated any willingness to make the refineries work, to end the mind-boggling scenario that sees Africa’s largest producer of crude oil expending several billions of dollars annually on the importation of 85 percent of its fuel needs. This is the same government that is now insisting that it needs to remove subsidies so it can spend the $8bn subsidy payout on providing critical infrastructure.
The Government is outraged by the cost of the subsidy, but not by the corruption responsible, or the fact that we have to depend on imports to meet almost all of our fuel needs. And if all the hundreds of billions of dollars of the last decade (annual budgets of about $25bn) have not improved our roads and schools and hospitals, is it this $8 billion that will bring transformation? At the root of the opposition is a trust deficit. Nigerian governments have not given the citizens any reason to trust them. Since 1999 successive governments have been promising significant improvements in power supply – and pumping government funds into building power plants – but nothing has come of it.
Nigeria’s corruption is in a class by itself. There is corruption, and then there is Nigerian corruption. Nigerians know that the so-called subsidy savings will go the way of its forebears – the road of no return, paved with Swiss Bank cheque book leaves. Now, no realistic Nigerian expects any government to totally wipe out corruption, but to have a government that feigns helplessness in the face of corruption is a bit too much to stomach, even by Nigeria’s very laid-back standards.
The message to President Jonathan and his government is simple: Earn our trust with the trillions you already have in your possession, then we can, and will, wholeheartedly hand over this subsidy trillion to you. Simple logic. But no, logic is not how these ones seek to deal with us. Common sense is a luxury, apparently, the closer one steps to the hallowed corridors of power. Nigeria has no functioning welfare system to cater for its teeming poor. National Health insurance is available only in name. Lagos, a city of 15 million, has no rail system – overground or underground. Nigeria’s hospitals are mostly glorified clinics, often lacking the most basic of supplies. The public school system is a disgrace; the near-total failure rates in national examinations bear eloquent testimony. Maternal mortality rates are some of the highest in Africa, and in the north, polio and cholera still haunt the land with eighteenth century confidence. Governments come and go, doing nothing to alter the communal and national status quo. They make no sacrifices, but are adept at insisting that Nigerians have to make sacrifices in order for their nation to be great. The poorest of the lot always suffer.
President Jonathan is not doing anything unusual, others before him have made similar arguments asking for “sacrifice”. The only thing that ends up getting sacrificed is the future and wellbeing of tens of millions of suffering Nigerians. Life goes on, as always. The President doesn’t think it necessary to earn our trust. But he demands ours. Here’s hoping that this time, Nigerians will see through the charade. And tell him to stuff his exhortations into the nearest pipeline, and do what twenty-two million Nigerians elected him to do, last April: earn their trust, and confidence, by wisely and prudently spending their commonwealth, to make their lives better, in the most tangible of ways: light bulbs that stay on, water taps that do not hiss when turned, hospitals that actually save lives, schools that stay open and add value to their students, policemen who actually protect citizens, and so on and so forth.
Crushing Nigerians underfoot by more than doubling the cost of living, on a New Year’s Day, in a land already gripped by mass suffering, is not the kind of transformation we’ve been waiting for. |
Politics › Subsidy Protesters Block Nigerian Petrol Stations - Reuters by okadaman2(op): 10:31am On Jan 04, 2012 |
By Chijioke Ohuocha LAGOS (Reuters) - Hundreds of demonstrators in Nigeria's commercial capital Lagos shut petrol stations, formed human barriers along motorways and hijacked buses on Tuesday in protest against the shock doubling of fuel prices after a government subsidy was removed. The fuel regulator announced the end of subsidies on Sunday, part of sweeping economic reforms designed to improve fiscal discipline in Africa's biggest oil producer, a hugely unpopular act that could cause social unrest, at least in the short term. More than 1,000 people in the main market area of central Lagos sang, chanted and waved placards reading: "no to fuel price hikes" and "we demand living wages". A group of demonstrators set up a roadblock of burning tyres on a major Lagos highway. Police in riot gear kept watch, but the protest was largely peaceful. "T[b]he prices of everything will increase, transport, housing, school fees, food, etc. The common man will not be able to survive. We will say no and oppose bad government policies. We will say no and oppose IMF (International Monetary Fund)policies," said Ganiat Fawehinmi, widow of a human rights lawyer. Economists say the subsidy filled the fuel tanks of middle-class drivers at the expense of the poor, encouraged massive corruption and waste, and handed[/b] over billions of dollars of government cash to a cartel of wealthy fuel importers. Removing it pushed pump prices to 150 naira per litre from 65 naira overnight. The subsidy removal is part of efforts to cut Nigeria's exorbitant cost of government, a flagship policy of President Goodluck Jonathan and his economic management team, alongside fixing the broken power sector and speeding up ports. Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iwealahas said removing the subsidy would save more than 1 trillion naira in 2012. Central Bank governor Lamido Sanusi is also behind the move. STRIKES, PROTESTSBut with the majority of Nigerians living on less than $2 per day, slashing subsidies is politically explosive. The Trades Union Congress and Nigerian Labour Congress called on Sunday for mass action to repeat strikes and street protests that thwarted previous attempts to end subsidies. There has not yet been an organised response. " Our struggle is not just against fuel subsidy, it is against bad governance. Jonathan has shown that he can't be trusted," Issa Aremu, vice president of the National Labour Congress, told demonstrators.
"He said he was engaging in dialogue and all of a sudden he went ahead and increased the price." Jonathan released a statement saying he had appointed a committee to ensure the money saved in subsidies was well spent and to "dialogue with organised labour, civil society and stakeholders." Protesters in Jonathan's Niger Delta region in the southeast, including ex-militants who brought havoc to the region until a series of peace deals in 2010, blocked the Warri-Port Harcourt highway, in Delta state, until three van loads of soldiers turned up to chase them away.
Many Nigerians fear any savings will be consumed by corrupt politicians. The committee would produce monthly savings estimates and make sure the funds are transferred to a special account in the central bank which would fund poverty alleviation programmes, Jonathan's statement said. Lawmakers have been divided on the subsidy removal, leaving the future of the measure potentially in doubt. If they decide to block it, they can add a subsidy to the 2012 budget which they have still to vote on. But they would need to find a way to pay for it, probably by cutting spending elsewhere. http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80203V20120103?pageNumber=3&virtualBrandChannel=0&sp=true |
Nairaland General › Re: O Ye My People! by okadaman2: 5:09pm On Jan 02, 2012 |
Katsumoto: Please explain the difference; are they both not grappling arts? Grappling yato si grappling. Gidigbo accessories are better: Ifunpa Onde Akiya Egbe Ado eleyin Ati bebelo Please don't mess with gidigbo. . .  |
Politics › Re: Fuel Now 141naira/liter, Bought 141 @ Oando In Maryland, How Much Did U Buy? by okadaman2: 8:16am On Jan 02, 2012 |
fire4fire: Bought fuel at N150/litre, I dey vex oooooo,spent 11k to fill my tank. 11k? Stop wasting money! Riding Okada (public transport) is cheaper. And you can buy a bicycle. |
Politics › Re: Fuel Now 141naira/liter, Bought 141 @ Oando In Maryland, How Much Did U Buy? by okadaman2: 8:13am On Jan 02, 2012 |
[quote author=alj_harem link=topic=836786.msg9877564#msg9877564 date=1325469238]yes oooo okada man
maybe when you buy fuel tomorrow and notice you have to increase 30 trip to 60 naira thus lack of costomers you would still be in buiness
Okada would reduce drastically and privatly owned would increase thus more traffic for you and your buiness as well
also after the okada buiness shebe u go go house go eat. When you here that cup of garri for 20 naira is not 80 naira then you would rejoice more
least i remind you that you also have to pay your house rent whenic would increase from lets say 50 thousand a year (as okada rider) to 100 thousand a year, then u might be forced to live under the brigbe to contiune your okada buiness.
yes ooo God bless GEJ[/quote]GEJ will spend the money well. He'll increase salary and People will be able to afford my increased fees
God bless GEJ |
Politics › Re: Fuel Now 141naira/liter, Bought 141 @ Oando In Maryland, How Much Did U Buy? by okadaman2: 2:48am On Jan 02, 2012 |
Well, at least nobody fit get mind to ban Okada again. Y'all need us now.
Next week, well roll out our new business: bicycle transport.
Happy 2012. God Bless GEJ |
Politics › Re: Lagos To Ban Okada, Fashola’s Committee Endorses Plan by okadaman2: 4:27pm On Dec 30, 2011 |
For the second time in one month, Fasholas enemies are carrying this rumor again  He will do no such thing! |
Nairaland General › Re: *~OAM4J Is Nairaland Moderator Of The Year 2011 *~ Congratulations!!! by okadaman2: 4:23pm On Dec 30, 2011 |
[quote author=okada_man link=topic=819947.msg9732130#msg9732130 date=1323463161]Revolution? Start? Na new car?  Moto seller wan follow politicians drag election?  You are on a very loooooong thing.[/quote]^ well, we told them early in the election, dem no listen  Politics is not a motorcar, you can't ride it like that. OAM4Jubilation. . .nobody can touch you here! Okada dey ya back jare. |
Politics › Re: Who Are These Nigerian Cabals by okadaman2: 4:55pm On Dec 23, 2011 |
Abeg, who get application form for joining The Cabal?
I wan join. |
Nairaland General › Re: O Ye My People! by okadaman2: 4:18pm On Dec 19, 2011 |
OK Oga OAM4Jollification, I have a message from Kilode?! Please make my last post appear as soon as you can, and unban my ID. Your Spambot is acting like a face-slapping pentecostal pastor, misunderstanding somebody's comment/posts  Cc: r231, Freiburger |
Nairaland General › Re: O Ye My People! by okadaman2: 4:09pm On Dec 19, 2011 |
^ Trying to shame the purists?
Well played warrior lady, very well played. |
Politics › Re: We Can Honour Ojukwu By Uniting Under APGA by okadaman2: 5:46am On Dec 14, 2011 |
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Politics › Re: Eze Ndi Igbo Nairaland Election (voting In Progress: ) by okadaman2: 3:11pm On Dec 11, 2011 |
[size=17pt]WORLD PRESS RELEASE[/size]RE: Character Assassination and Campaign of Calumny Against Our Party and Leadership. Our Response:In the past few days, The establishment backed party, Igbo Deceivers Alliance has waged an unprecedented media campaign of calumny and lies against our great party and leadership. We normally do not respond to spurious and baseless allegations. But due to the current political climate and our resolve to save Ndigbo from the hands of these deceivers and their hired propagandists, we have decided to speak out at this time. We want to specifically refer to the report of 10th December 2011, published by NaharaReporters, a disreputable soft-sell publication owned by Chief Nchara "Ọ nwere nsogbu" of Nkalagu, a well known, long-term political associate of the IDA candidate Chief Onlytruth? popularly called Ikenga dike 1 of Anaedo. We make bold to state today, that there are no defections within the Okija-Juju Progressive Congress. Our party members, and our leadership are not only united but we are more strengthened than ever before, because of the overwhelming and humbling support we have received from our people across Igboland. Our resolve to save Ndigbo from the current established political vultures is unshaken and unshakable. To us, every Igbo is a Diala, with the full right to vote and be voted for. Your support is our Strength. We also seize this opportunity to affirm our support for the already published statement of withdrawal released by our indefatigable candidate, Okija Juju. We stand resolutely behind him. We refuse to further dignify this embarassing political charade with our participation. Ndigbo deserves better than this We of the OPC are already in talks to build an alliance of like minded progressives, committed to the salvation and progress of all Ndigbo. We will announce the full details in due course. We want to stress that we have faith in the ever dynamic Ndigbo people. We believe that with their help and support, this Political circus of an election will not stand! Ka madụ ncha hụ ezi okwu, We will translate this Press Release into Igbo and hand deliver a copy to every ezi n’ulo we can reach across Ndigbo land. Our People Shall Be Free! Long Live Okija Juju Progressive Congress! Long Live Ndigbo Worldwide! Signed: Yours in the Struggle Okada_man [img] http://ohanaezendigboindia.in/images/logo.png[/img] |
Politics › Re: Subsidy Removal:GEJ Ready For Mass Revolt by okadaman2: 1:36am On Dec 11, 2011 |
That's my president !!! Original Egbesu Warrior! We are behind you. Carry go Sah!  Hmm. . .Mass revolt no be moinmoin o .  |
Politics › Re: Nigerian, Osita Mba, May Be Sacked By Hm Revenue & Customs…for Telling The Truth by okadaman2: 2:17am On Dec 10, 2011 |
We are not surprised. Those long nosed liars are the original and ogbonge creators of 419 and cheating. May the gods continue to guide and protect my honest brotha Osita Mba.  |
Politics › Re: Monumental Oil Subsidy Fraud And Corruption At The Nnpc-the Damning Kpmg Report by okadaman2: 10:40pm On Dec 09, 2011 |
There are only two ethnic groups in Nigeria. The elitist Leaders and the masses! Shikena. |
Politics › Re: Monumental Oil Subsidy Fraud And Corruption At The Nnpc-the Damning Kpmg Report by okadaman2: 9:43pm On Dec 09, 2011 |
This madam like wuruwuru money sha  |