Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 11:31am On Jul 15, 2011 |
Odunnu: Whats brewing 2day? just normal parole |
Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 8:57am On Jul 15, 2011 |
Yes i do |
Forum Games › Re: The Reshuffle Game. by olawalebabs(m): 5:43am On Jul 15, 2011 |
Spot love |
Jokes Etc › Re: Boko Haram Trembles As Jack Bauer Flies To Naija by olawalebabs(m): 6:57pm On Jul 14, 2011 |
Jack partner chole just complain that the country does not have the needed tracking device to track the call made by the sect spokeman. What a pity |
Islam › Re: Barka Juma'ah by olawalebabs(m): 6:52pm On Jul 14, 2011 |
Barka da jummah, how are you preparing for the forthcoming Ramadan |
Jokes Etc › Re: I Hope They Read This: Lol by olawalebabs(m): 6:39pm On Jul 14, 2011 |
No wonder bin always tackle you. You need to visit yaba left side. |
Politics › Re: Let's Have Your Complaints Here by olawalebabs(m): 6:35pm On Jul 14, 2011 |
Ileke and mod thanks for making this thread interesting. More of this. |
Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 1:55pm On Jul 14, 2011 |
Comrade Ajanlekoko indeed! |
Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 5:46am On Jul 14, 2011 |
Dont know yet |
Jokes Etc › Re: Lagos Flood by olawalebabs(op): 8:29pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
Mikuz this is a false accursation and i demand a PUBLIC apology or else my legal team will file a charge against you. |
Jokes Etc › Re: Lagos Flood by olawalebabs(op): 5:45pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
Waoh. Am bless with a ph.d certificate. Now. I be "Dr" |
Islam › Re: Islamic Economics by olawalebabs(op): 1:56pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
The issue of Sharia banking has been over flog with those against it flowing some sentimental issue, more to come on it shortly. |
Islam › Re: Beneficial Saying by olawalebabs(op): 1:52pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
those who yearn for a day when the world, when the earthly life would conform to their ideals would have to wait till eternity; they would have to wait for a day when the earth would be as clean as the heavens; when the sun would rise at night, when the moon would emerge at dawn. |
Islam › Re: Beneficial Saying by olawalebabs(op): 1:46pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
those who yearn for a day when the world, when the earthly life would conform to their ideals would have to wait till eternity; they would have to wait for a day when the earth would be as clean as the heavens; when the sun would rise at night, when the moon would emerge at dawn |
Jokes Etc › Re: Lagos Flood by olawalebabs(op): 1:40pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
A married woman was found on another man's bed in a house 4 streets away from her home in Lagos. She claimed it was the flood that carried her there!! Lol |
Jokes Etc › Re: Lagos Flood by olawalebabs(op): 1:35pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
A girl was ask how she got pregnant by her parent, she reply "it is not pregnant, but the flood water" |
Forum Games › Re: ~Positive Inspirational Game . . . ~ by olawalebabs(m): 1:20pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
Our progress is best measure when our today is better than yesterday |
NYSC › Boko Haram Bombs Borno Nysc Camp •thousands Flee •3 Killed As Fresh Bombs Rock M by olawalebabs(op): 1:18pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
HERE was pandemonium yesterday in the National Youth Service Commission (NYSC) camp on Biu road Maiduguri, Borno State, as a bomb suspected to be planted by Islamic radical sect, Boko Haram exploded.
Scores were said to have been injured though there was no official confirmation.
A corps member who spoke with our correspondent on condition of anonymity, said soldiers took over the camp immediately and ordered corpers to stay indoors.
The bomb reportedly went off at 9:27pm.
This was as some southern states have concluded arrangement to evacuate their indigenes from Borno State, as attacks by radical Islamic sect, Boko Haram, continued yesterday.
However, government pleaded with residents not to flee assuring that adequate measures have been put in place to ensure that safety.
Daily Champion gathered that the decision of some of the states is to save the loss of lives and property of their indigenes.
In Anambra, Governor Peter Obi said his government would begin the evacuation of indigenes of the state from the troubled city. Last week, Abia State had warned that it will evacuate its citizens if the attacks continue.
Obi said the state is now set to commence evacuation of Anambra Indigenes from crises prone areas. He said this yesterday while speaking with State House Correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Obi who is Deputy Chairman of the Governors Forum, said the decision became necessary to save citizens from being killed in the cross fire between members of the Joint Task Force (JTF) and the Boko Haram.
"The option is to begin the evacuation of Anambra indigenes from Maiduguri, Borno State if the bombings in the state continue".
He said he was taking the option because he was not prepared to see any son or daughter of Anambra to be harmed in any part of the country from crisis.
He described the actions of the Boko Haram sect which has resulted in killings of innocent Nigerians in parts of the country, as unacceptable and must be tackled.
He said members of the sect have no justifiable reasons for their actions, noting that there was no need for some group of people to make the country very inhabitable to citizens. "This is the only country that we have as our own; we have no place to go".
Meanwhile, two soldiers were injured in the attack on Baga road, Maiduguri Metropolitan Council (MMC) while operatives of the Joint Task Force (JTF) the allegedly shot dead three members of the Boko Haram sect who attacked the military vehicle.
Confirming the attack, the spokesman of the JTF Colonel Victor Ebheleme said the bomb was thrown at the patrol vehicle of the soldiers, while on a routine duty in the area, injuring two soldiers.
He said the soldiers engaged the sect members in a gun duel killing three of them, while others who fled and were pursued with a view to arresting them and bringing them to book.
Another bomb blast occurred when a NEMA vehicle matched on a bomb buried in pot hole on the same Baga road but no injury was reported yet.
Meanwhile, people in their thousands are relocating from Maiduguri to their villages and other neighboring states they consider safe, as the city has been turned into war zone were business and social activities have come to a stand still.
When our correspondent visited some motor parks in the metropolis, thousands of people including students of the University of Maiduguri which was closed on Monday were seen boarding vehicles going outside the state.
It could be recalled that the management of University of Maiduguri, on Monday due to what it described as security threat to both the institution and the students.
Speaking to our correspondent, a student of the institution, Ibrahim Idris said they received the news of the closure with mixed feelings because students can no longer settle and read peacefully, as gunshots and bombing were the order of the day around the institution, but also regretted that the school calendar will be distorted due to the closure.
Borno State government described the security situation in the state as unfortunate but that the security measures put in place is aimed at curtailing the incessant bombings and killings of security agents and other innocent citizens.
The Borno state government and JTF assured the public not to panic or migrate from their houses as adequate measures have been put in place by the government to ensure public security.
In a press release signed by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) Ambassador Baba Ahmed Jidda the state government said it is not unmindful of the hardship being experienced by the public as a result of the recent ban on commercial motorcycle operators. However, government will soon distribute tri-cycles and buses as palliative measures to ease the current hardship. http://www.champion.com.ng/displaycontent.asp?pid=10276 |
Politics › Re: Can Buhari Stop Boko Haram? by olawalebabs(m): 12:47pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
Myself2: Buhari wont crush himself,not from outside,if he was the president,then he'd just call them off(they're his boys and will listen to him) mind you he is the first past head of state to have condemn the activities of Boko Haram, so he is not part of them |
Jokes Etc › Re: Boko Haram Trembles As Jack Bauer Flies To Naija by olawalebabs(m): 12:20pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
What a incisive news |
Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 12:18pm On Jul 13, 2011 |
something like what |
Politics › Re: Can Buhari Stop Boko Haram? by olawalebabs(m): 8:59pm On Jul 12, 2011 |
Buhari can crush boko haram just as gej too can. Any government with sincerity of purpose will do that |
Politics › Re: El Rufai: A Perfect Chameleon by olawalebabs(op): 8:50pm On Jul 12, 2011 |
otokx: Is it not the "God is my witness" man? you are refering to the mantu, zwingina case |
Jokes Etc › Lagos Flood by olawalebabs(op): 3:16pm On Jul 12, 2011 |
LetterFromOBJ: Lagosians refused to vote for *Humblerra*, So stop complaining and start sweeping the Flood with ur *Broom*! Lwkmd! |
Forum Games › Re: 3words Per Post: Part 3 by olawalebabs(m): 3:05pm On Jul 12, 2011 |
what about that |
Politics › Re: El Rufai: A Perfect Chameleon by olawalebabs(op): 9:20pm On Jul 11, 2011 |
Just a clear description of the man. El Rufai |
Jokes Etc › Re: Your Horse Phoned by olawalebabs(m): 4:34pm On Jul 11, 2011 |
Pagan, You make me laugh heee heeee |
Jokes Etc › Re: Proper Naija Babe by olawalebabs(m): 4:29pm On Jul 11, 2011 |
9ja Gal, No comment |
Jokes Etc › Re: Who dash Monkey Banana? by olawalebabs(m): 4:27pm On Jul 11, 2011 |
Foolish People |
Politics › El Rufai: A Perfect Chameleon by olawalebabs(op): 4:19pm On Jul 11, 2011 |
Mallam Nasir El-Rufai is a Nigerian who basks in controversy like a reptile out of water in high noon. It does not matter in what hue or in whose company you find him. He is ready to square up to the next guy. It is all about El-Rufai’s interest even if it masquerades as a national pride. He is one of our enduring peacocks.
He is also a chameleon of interest. Whether as a lackey, a bureaucrat, a protégé, a master, or a turncoat, he is not afraid to stake a claim, and he is always smoking for a fight like a snake backed into a corner. He may strike and he may even be stricken. But boredom is the last emotion you feel with this slight man of Napoleonic ego.
El-Rufai is not about the morality or justice. He is about the fight, the theatrics of the brickbat hurled. He knows his quarry well, so he engages him or them with the gusto of a marksman. He is amoral, a neutralist with an armour. He shoots but he does not always hit the target. Hitting the target is not important if by merely shooting you set all the birds aflutter and screaming for shelter.
He has done these well in the course of his public career. Now, he seems ready to play the role not only as a critic, but I daresay as a “revolutionary.” That is why the recent controversy over an article he wrote was only a phase in the metamorphosis of this man who understands his country so well. He is our subversive cynic.
Sometimes I think of him the way I think of such artistes in the United States as Britney Speers and Madonna, who have a knack for unveiling the foibles of the system. Many speak ill of them, but the same society craves for a new act in their evolving histrionics. They love them. They hate them. But they want them.
El-Rufai does not have the thespian assiduity of these accomplished beauties. But he does know how to work the society to his own frenzy. He is a vain man, and he is not afraid to flaunt that either. He makes gaffes, and he does not regret that, too. He just has to set the fire on the roof top and he will jubilate in quiet mischief as everyone in the house runs like a hare. Quietude is not what you normally associate with him though. Once or twice, when I have met with him, he looked like someone caged in until he got the chance to talk. And he loved the opportunity. In a few minutes, the roof caved in.
It is in the context that we must understand the recent article he wrote. It was meant to stir, and there was nothing wrong with that if you asked him. He probably did not intend to correct, but to infuriate, to remind the National Security Adviser that the El-Rufai who was in office a few years ago and who stirred controversy over land allocation and corruption issues, and who was in exile, is not about to be coaxed or coerced into silence.
El-Rufai wrote the article and the NSA’s men claimed he got the facts wrong, about how much was allocated to his office, over N200 billion. They said he got it wrong, and they picked him up. One year ago or even when he was the minister of the Federal Capital Territory, it would have been unthinkable to say that El-Rufai was arrested by the security forces.
Yet, they picked him up. El-Rufai says he got his facts from the budget, and he has the right to say so. So there. If he got his facts wrong, arresting him was not the place of democracy. The security forces fell into his hands. Rather than win on the platform of debate, they resorted to the strong arm and lost the argument. This is a system for the force of facts, not the force of arms. Unwittingly, they turned El-Rufai, who once defended a system of feline and corrupt rule, into a hero of free speech. If the security forces had their facts, they could easily have turned him into a public shame. Rather, it is the small man who now looms large for civility.
I learnt they were disappointed that he was a turncoat. How could anyone be disappointed at El-Rufai? A man who is capable of any emotion is capable of any betrayal. So he was once in government. Does that mean he should not take on government? What makes the government sacrosanct? We want more people in government who will lash out at government and unveil its seedy underside.
In the U.S., it is common. A man serves in government and he gives his honest account or, at least, an honest account as he sees it. We saw the story of Rumsfeld, or Clinton. They told their stories. It is an opportunity for us to see how the systems work from inside.
At one time, El-Rufai was the good guy of the security forces. He was the one with whom the Owu chief was well pleased, the one who knew who was safe for Nigeria and who should go to jail. He was the quintessential patriot, and he condemned others for lack of fervour for Nigeria.
Yet if you looked at his career well, you would admit that as FCT minister, he was transformational. He brought order, neatness and even picturesque allure to the city that was falling into an Alao-Akala Ibadan.
So, he did well as a minister. But also as a minister he was Baba’s lackey, fighting his every war and defending the corrupt system and the despotic “democrat.” He once told me in an interview that the time had not come for us to be worried over the issue of conflict of interest in office. Even when some raised uproar over it, he never tried to my knowledge to defend himself.
He served Atiku well when he was his protégé. When he turned over to OBJ and Obj fought with Atiku, he knew where the power lay, so he turned coat and pitched his tent with the Owu chief. It was the amoral El-Rufai at work. He swung without a squeak.
When Yar’Adua took over, he was Yar’Adua’s man before he was not. When Jonathan became president, he was for the meek man until things turned sour. Now he is serenading Buhari whom we once nudged as unelectable. In an interview in The Nation on Sunday, he said that the man has changed. Changed from what, Nasir? Other than his allegiance to democracy over a decade ago, he is still as inflexible as his ramrod stature.
El-Rufai knew how to work the system, and somehow, it made him into a sort of public cause célèbre. He somehow helps to show us the bad side of the system because he has not been the good side himself. In the way he allocated land, we learned how government shares our resources. From his role as a lackey, we knew how people moved up in government. From his serial betrayals, we understood that playing the harlot is the way to gains. As master, he made people work for him and that, ironically, is how you command loyalists even if you are not one yourself. As a critic and “revolutionary,” he is trying to come full cycle. He is telling us that he can reveal and revel in the rottenness of our system, he being part of it.
He knows how to game the system, draw attention to himself, laugh at us, and still sleep well at night. From the recent fight with the system, he has shown that you can move from being an establishment mainstay to a nemesis of the system. We need more of him. http://www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/index.php/columnist/monday/sam-omatseye/12028-a-perfect-chameleon.html |
Jokes Etc › Re: Brain Teaser by olawalebabs(m): 9:21pm On Jul 08, 2011 |
He don answer it, though i disagree with it |
Forum Games › Re: The Blame Game! by olawalebabs(m): 3:34pm On Jul 08, 2011 |
[quote author=Lord_Reed link=topic=672008.msg8672702#msg8672702 date=1310068514]Blame your alarm for failing to alert you.
My love is ill who do I blame?[/quote]blame the play of last night
am having headache, who do i blame |