Otherique's Posts
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chigoizie7:In Aba, you should find water in about 80fts, but crystal clear water in About 120fts, There are no rocks underneath, so you shouldn't have difficulties in manually drilling for edible water within a day. We used a borehole earthing for the new 300Kva transformer we recently installed in our street, as always, its our very own effort and no Government's input, that borehole was manually drilled by 5 young men and attained 80fts within 4hrs or less because they came around 4 and left around after 7. Its not clean water per say but that hole will not dry up anytime soon. and we paid 40k, though no pipe was installed. |
Quite hilarious, if you ask me.
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I didn't see flavour, or. Don Jazzy. |
Quite Impressive, I must admit.
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Why won't you just come and quench my thirst Kit? I am dying of dehydration already! Just bring on the story. Great writeup. |
The $45 billion dollars was the Foreign Reserve, its currently about $30 billion naira currently. the $2.1 billion was for ECA which they share quarterly amongst the three tiers of Government, even when FG opined to have it saved for days like this in the SWF which of course was created for days when the price for crude will fall below expectations, You know what the governors did, they took the FG to court, insisting that they can't save when they've not fixed infrastructural problems bedevilling their states. It was even out of strong head that FG managed to save $1 billion in the SWF, please leave GEJ out of this, the governors are the architect of whatever problem we are witnessing, Buhari has fallen for the first bait of rewarding reckless state governors with bailouts, he'll fall some more, by the time he realises it, they'll have already made him a foot mat. mayor20: |
Arsene Wenger: 714 Games = 3 premier league titles. Mourinho. : 196 Games = 3 premier league titles. what's your yardstick for assessment?. silly polls everywhere. ![]() |
For him pocket!OP, in real life, you are the biblical rich man who despite his numerous cattle and sheep, still had to take Lazarus's lamb to entertain his guest. How can you create such a front page bound thread and still be first to comment?! |
Try chewing it during harmattan season, ![]() |
Am equally wondering. ddippset:You lots are usually very unintelligent and utterly lacking any iota of truth, your arguments are usually beclouded by sentiments. I vividly remember how you guys over flogged the $5 million dollars U.S pledged for the fight against bokoharam, even I, became overwhelmed because I was beginning to wonder how bad things must have gotten for the Presidency and his petty loyalist to jubilate this much at the sound of a mere $5 million dollars to fight terrorism. This naturally wouldn't be an issue if not for PMB's natural ability to lie so much through his teeth about meeting a virtually empty treasury; In about 40 days, he's laid his hands on almost a trillion naira!. $2 billion in ECA is over #400 billion, another #400 billion from NLNG proceeds. All these in a virtually empty treasury. God have Mercy on you all! |
Is Serena the thickest Athlete ever?! CC: Lalasticlala
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Is Serena Williams the thickest Athlete ever?! |
acenazt:May all those thunders that has being doing press-ups since strike this post. #90 Billion?! what are his investments?! Is he the first or only first class?! or is he the only Quantity Surveyor in Africa? over 40 mansions in Abuja?! Just because he was once a minister of that city. #90 Billion is some states budget for a whole year o! No wonder the gap between the rich and the poor in the north is just so wide and can never be filled when you lots come on here to defend the indefensible. |
@Utchgirl, I see comprehension is certainly not your forte hence I shall persevere in ensuring you learn a thing or two. I was very careful with my write ups, that's why I said a "Functional" regulatory body, you should spare the lectures for yourself, you certainly need it more than I do. Even NMAs will not want any medical discipline in Polytechnics because of a whole lot of issues ranging from the ineptitude of the regulatory agencies to a whole lots of vices. How often do you hear about courses not accredited in polytechnics? I was also specific when I talked about the basic requirements needed for lecturing in Universities, if its fully implemented is not really the bone of contention right now, am sure you do understand the Nigerian factor. you do not have to malign my person to feel superior, I belong to both worlds, I know enough. Thanks. |
@ Utchgirl 1. The quality isn't exactly the same in the sense that Universities has a higher standard, more fundings and proper regulations compared to polytechnics. 2. A Dr. can only be a HOD and not a dean of a faculty, you can ask around. 3. Quotas limits the crowd in a lecture hall, it makes the population manageable by the school administration, it doesn't put pressure on available infrastructure and brings the lecturer close to the students. 4. No?! You can't be serious. when you ask questions, you let the other party do the answering. Universities run programmes like Diplomas which is equivalent to the polytechnic OND and it's up to you to further or go find a job with it. And when I say serious learning takes place from HND 1, I mean it is at this stage there's crowd control, only those with good G.Ps are admitted for HND programs. The one year IT for polytechnics is a must, whether it adds intelligence to your area of discipline is a lesson for another day because I have seen a prospective accountant mixing sand and cement at a construction site and another in her mother's canteen. Because its not properly regulated and no supervisors to oversee the teeming population of ND students doing IT in various states. 5. The yardstick for assessment is a typical government funded Institutions because private polytechnics is almost at same level with secondary schools, you'll find students been taught by corpers. The only B.sc you'll find in a classroom is a graduate trainee who's running his M.sc and sometimes assigned to assist the lecturer who is in charge of that course; they are usually first class products retained by the school. Still at that, they are unworthy of teaching undergraduates, that's why they are referred to as graduate trainee and can only assume the title of assistant lecturer when the have a Masters but Senior lecturer is for Drs and profs unlike in polytechnics. 6. I think lecturers of polytechnics need to upgrade themselves, how can you handle Ph.Ds when even the rector is not a professor? they do not have the manpower to run post graduate programmes, the requirement to be worthy of a lecturer is a Ph.D in the university according to NUC but that will be asking for too much in polytechnics. 7. Thank God you mentioned NUC, at least you are acknowledging there's a functional regulatory body who can discredit any department for non-performance in the university, polytechnics has no functional regulatory body, that's why they can comfortably deviate from their mandate of offering practical technical courses to offering pure administrative courses without sanctions. 8. Avoid taking on my person, its not the smartest thing to do. the comparison of polytechnic graduates and road side mechanics is derived from the argument that HND holders are better off than their B.Sc counterparts because they are more exposed to practical stuffs than B.sc holders. Then is it safe to say a road side mechanic is better than polytechnics mechanical engineers?[i] Now sweetheart, I hope my arguments has been convincing enough. |
@ Utchgirl, Salient point you have raised but allow my humble self, Hon. Otherique the pleasure of a divergent view from yours. Besides, I heard variety's the spice of life. Now back to the issue of a B.Sc and HND comparison, 1. The quality of Education on both sides aren't exactly the same. 2. While a Dr. can head a polytechnic, a Dr can't even be a dean in a Faculty. 3. To enhance learning, Universities are restricted to quota admission unlike in polytechnics where everybody is admitted. 4. In polytechnics, serious learning takes place from HND 1 and above, as a matter of fact, only HND levels are properly regulated. 5. A B.sc holder can be a senior lecturer in a polytechnic which is a taboo in the University. 6. Even polytechnics do not offer postgraduate programmes. 7. polytechnics just like Colleges of Educations are specialised institutes and should have no business offering courses outside the general intention of establishing. 8. Lastly, Saying a polytechnic graduate is more educated and exposed compared to a University graduate is like saying a roadside Mechanic is better than a polytechnic graduate. My 2 cents. |
khachee:[i]Khachee?! Doesn't sound like Sen. Netob to me because it was him I was quoting albeit sarcastic, if this thread is about saying anything and everything, do not attempt to restrict my expressions. Now that has been made clear, My name is not Othorique, My humble name is Hon. Otherique and I am admonishing you to take note of every alphabet in it. Meanwhile, you'll have to assume the role of the clerk, you are yet to convince me that you are a typical Naija politician who has perfected the art of rigging himself into power. Cheers![/] |
Fiscal bailout: Time for states to recalibrate June 30, 2015 Opinion BY Oseloka H. Obaze In life and statecraft, there comes a time when delusion meets with reality. And so it is now, for twenty-eight Nigerian States and their elected leaders. The fiscal cliff confronting states that cannot meet their basic fiduciary obligations, including payment of salaries, is hardly surprising. This crisis is the manifestation of years of fiscal profligacy, malignant imprudence, malfeasance, disregard for proper planning and an aversion by elected officials to the intricacies of adaptive leadership and good governance. But, the crux of the matter is the lack of vision, indiscipline and utter disregard for results-based budgeting that aims at efficiency and thus compels short, medium and long term planning. It is unconscionable that seventy-five percent of Nigerian States that collectively earned over N2.8 trillion in internally generated revenue (IGR) in the past five years, and collected regular monthly allocations from the Federation Account, cannot pay salaries. In the 2013 financial year, the 36 states collected N7.9 trillion, and N7.75 trillion in 2014. What is mindboggling is how States that generated some N41.6 trillion between 2011 and 2014 financial years can become so cash- strapped. Read poor fiscal management. The raging debate is whether the cash-strapped States should get a bailout from the federal government and the nature of the bailout. The reality is that recklessness of any nature, fiscal or otherwise, should not be rewarded. Mistakes and accidents can be overlooked, not fiscal profligacy involving public funds. For too long, our elected leaders have operated on the assumption that they are not accountable to the people, and that they will not be evaluated by the people. At election times, they use state funds to finagle their way back into office. Now, it is crunch time and the evaluation will be done on the moral basis of how well they managed their state coffers; and how well they have planned for the proverbial rainy day. Still, our present circumstances compel the Nigerian attentive public to speak truth to power, knowing now, as it were, that politics is too important to be left to politicians. So, should the states trapped by fiscal imprudence and insolvency be bailed out? The answer is not immediately! Let them sweat it out and figure out how to recalibrate. Should the affected states decide to take interim bridging loans to fill the existing fiscal gaps, they will hopefully manage the resources frugally. And, should one or two states shut down due to insolvency, so be it. Such developments will make it clear to all that elected leaders who fail to provide more accountable government will be swept aside by their own failings. In the end, any bailout must apply equitably to all 36 states and with stringent conditionalities. States needing the bailout can draw down on the funds and those who don’t, can hold theirs in reserve. The reality is that the present fiscal crisis was not entirely unforeseen. When the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) was proposed some years back as a stopgap measure for times like these, many state governors demurred. I recall in particular, former Gov. Rotimi Amaechi’s trenchant criticism of the SWF and his blunt refusal to support the establishment of the fund. Granted that some who are now governors were then outside the governance orbit; most already had political aspirations and were members of Nigeria’s attentive public. They should have spoken up. The genesis of the present crisis requires no hard scrabble analysis to decipher. A conjunction of circumstances, namely, misplaced priorities, poor fiscal planning, preference for envelope budgeting, dysfunctional tax regimes, grandiose ego projects, bloated governance personnel, states over-reliance on appropriated local government funds and finally, crashing of global oil prices, combined to get the states into their present quandary. Today, the indebted states collectively owe N658 billion. President Muhammadu Buhari did well in hearing out the governors who are seeking a bailout. His expressed willingness to bail them out, subject to the advice of his Economic Team, is commendable. His advice that they should continue sorting out their challenges, including through the recovery of funds stolen by their predecessors, is also instructive. But, there is more. Conventional wisdom advises instant belt-tightening; and cutting one’s coat according to one’s cloth. If addressing the prevailing challenges warrant further borrowing and bailouts, then fiscal responsibility will compel corollary adjustments through efficient cost- cutting. One is hard-pressed to hear the affected states proposing such remedial measures. The proposal by the governors to restructure their debts by liquidating their longer tenured bonds via Irrevocable Standing Payment Order (ISOP), while seemingly salutary, amounts also to egregious passing of the buck to their successors. Paradoxically, by this request, the governors seek remedial measures via the very route they are unwilling to walk with long term and cost- effective fiscal planning that would place their successors in good stead. Responsibility for change rests with the citizens, who must now insist that the twenty-eight cash-strapped States borrow a leaf from the eight solvent states and draw comparative lessons from what the solvent states are doing right. It is noteworthy that my home state, Anambra, is not one of the insolvent states. Her secure position is not unconnected to past and lingering pains of the non-payment of salaries experience, which the state went through during Mabadinuju era and the commitment by succeeding governors that never again will the Anambra people undergo such fiscal trauma. It is time to think the unthinkable. There are other compelling fiscal issues that the three tiers of government must begin to grapple with under President Buhari’s leadership, and in light of our dwindling oil revenue. First, we must trim the cost of governance drastically at all levels, thus making the public service nimble and efficient. Second, we must take hardheaded decisions that will allow the States and Local Governments to receive more than the Federal Government in federal revenue allocations. The present 52-26-22 percent ratio is inequitable. Third, the States must commit to Local Government autonomy, despite the prevailing argument that the local government is not a federating unit. Fourth, the public and private sectors must share the responsibility for wealth and job creation. Finally, the present fiscal crisis which coincides fortuitously with the change in administration should compel honest dialogue at all levels. Inevitably, the States will negotiate from a point of weakness. While they need not grovel, their parlous circumstances ought to be sufficiently humbling to compel an honest and introspective evaluation, recalibration and refocus on good governance processes and related actualities. On this, the nation must act in concert. • Obaze is a public policy adviser and the immediate- past Secretary to the Anambra State Government. CC: lalasticlala |
Am sorry Sen. Netob, the post you seek has been ascribed to another Zone. I Hon. Otherique will suggest you go for something achievable for you zone, probably the deputy /assistant Chief Whip Netob309: |
Price range Pls. |
[/i]I am Hon. Otherique, I solemnly offer myself to be elected as the speaker of the 8th Assembly. Thanks[i] |
what's the code? |
chai, this guy's mumuness is monumental... cc: Introvert. |
should have screen shot it |
No surebet Logo?! |
It is easier expelling Tinubu. |
Introvert |
RIP |
Introvert! |
Introvert! |
Unfair OP |

