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PoliticsRe: Nigeria, US Sign MOU On 10,000MW Power Africa Initiative • Anambra Gets 1,500MW by Pergrace: 7:52am On Jul 25, 2014
Sincere9gerian: THISDAY learnt that the containers which had been[b] abandoned for 11 years at the ports in Lagos and Onne in River[/b]s State contained equipment meant for turnkey power projects in about 12 states in the country thereby stalling all the affected projects, and effectively raising concern on the commitment of the government and other stakeholders in the power sector.
cry cry cry cry cry at the bolded
SportsRe: Photos: Pro-Palestinians Invade Football Pitch & Attack Israeli Footballers by Pergrace: 10:16am On Jul 24, 2014
Emmyk: The first pix,... Epic cheesy
The guy retaliated at the fourth pix grin grin grin grin grin
Politics30 Vehicle Manufacturing Plants Take Off Soon by Pergrace(op): 4:11pm On Jul 22, 2014
The National Automotive Council on Tuesday said 30 vehicle manufacturing plants would soon commence operation in the country..

The Director, Policy and Planning, Mr Lukman Mahmud, made the disclosure in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

He said the Federal Government was working toward facilitating the production of vehicle components at competitive prices through the Nigerian automotive industry and to create employment opportunities.

Mahmud explained that prior to the pronouncement of the National Automotive Industry Development Plan in 2013, Nigeria had 14 existing plants across the nation.

“The protection and incentives provided to the industry under the new policy persuaded 16 companies to establish assembly plants,” he said.

Mahmud added that the motor assembling companies would come in with complete and semi-knock-down vehicles.

He said Peugeot Automobile Nigeria, Leyland, Fiat, Volkswagen and Mercedes were the complete Knock-down assembling plants that were forced to shut down due to the influx of imported cars or and second hand vehicles otherwise called “Tokunbo”.

Mahmud said the idea of Semi-Knock-Down and Complete Knock-Down import was to address the demand from the automobile market due to eventual hike on tariff and levy of imported fairly used cars.

The director said the policy made provision for high patronage from government and Credit Purchase Scheme.

He explained that under the credit purchase scheme, middle class Nigerians would buy cars at affordable prices and pay back within 36 to 46 months and at single digit interest.

He added that modalities were being worked out with all stakeholders in the sector to curtail smuggling of used cars.

Mahmud said that when stability was achieved and the demand from market met, the manufactures would buy the component parts locally.

“Plans are in top gear to revive the auto glass company in Ibadan, car seat company at Kaduna, Nocaco Auto Wires, exhaust pipes and many more parts and consumable producers in the country,” he said.

The director told NAN that the council had established material testing laboratory in Zaria, Kaduna State; components testing laboratory in Enugu and emission testing laboratory in Lagos.

“All these are to ensure that the components to be produced are of international standard,” he said.

Mahmud said that a critical element of the policy was under legislation at the National Assembly to avoid policy somersault and protection of the investors in the sector. (NAN)

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/07/30-vehicle-manufacturing-plants-take-soon/

I don't know if I am dreaming,but I think this is a welcome development. The major challenge I foresee is stable power supply.
PoliticsRe: 11 Parents Of Nigeria's Abducted Girls Die by Pergrace(op): 1:26pm On Jul 22, 2014
Chanchit: I'm sorry to say this, but I need more than pictures to believe this..
as shown on yahoo website

Politics11 Parents Of Nigeria's Abducted Girls Die by Pergrace(op): 12:31pm On Jul 22, 2014
I just saw this on yahoo news,though I don't know if the story is authentic.check the link below

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — About a dozen parents of the more than 200 kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls will never see their daughters again.

Since the mass abduction of the schoolgirls by Islamic extremists three months ago, at least 11 of their parents have died and their hometown, Chibok, is under siege from the militants, residents report.

Seven fathers of kidnapped girls were among 51 bodies brought to Chibok hospital after an attack on the nearby village of Kautakari this month, said a health worker who insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisals by the extremists.

At least four more parents have died of heart failure, high blood pressure and other illnesses that the community blames on trauma due to the mass abduction 100 days ago, said community leader Pogu Bitrus, who provided their names.

"One father of two of the girls kidnapped just went into a kind of coma and kept repeating the names of his daughters, until life left him," said Bitrus.

Chibok is cut off because of frequent attacks on the roads that are studded with burned out vehicles. Commercial flights no longer go into the troubled area and the government has halted charter flights.

Through numerous phone calls to Chibok and the surrounding area, The Associated Press has gathered information about the situation in the town where the students were kidnapped from their school.

More danger is on the horizon.

Boko Haram is closing in on Chibok, attacking villages ever closer to the town. Villagers who survive the assaults are swarming into the town, swelling its population and straining resources. A food crisis looms, along with shortages of money and fuel, said community leader Bitrus.

On the bright side, some of the young women who escaped are recovering, said a health worker, who insisted on anonymity because he feared reprisals from Boko Haram. Girls who had first refused to discuss their experience, now are talking about it and taking part in therapeutic singing and drawing — a few drew homes, some painted flowers and one young woman drew a picture of a soldier with a gun last week.

Girls who said they would never go back to school now are thinking about how to continue their education, he said.

Counseling is being offered to families of those abducted and to some of the 57 students who managed to escape in the first few days, said the health worker. He is among 36 newly trained in grief and rape counseling, under a program funded by USAID.

All the escapees remain deeply concerned about their schoolmates who did not get away.

A presidential committee investigating the kidnappings said 219 girls still are missing. But the community says there are more because some parents refused to give the committee their daughters' names, fearing the stigma involved.

Boko Haram filmed a video in which they threatened to sell the students into slavery and as child brides. It also showed a couple of the girls describing their "conversion" from Christianity to Islam.

At least two have died of snake bites, a mediator who was liaising with Boko Haram told AP two months ago. At that time he said at least 20 of the girls were ill — not surprising given that they are probably being held in an area infested with malarial mosquitoes, poisonous snakes and spiders, and relying on unclean water from rivers.

Most of the schoolgirls are still believed to be held in the Sambisa Forest — a wildlife reserve that includes almost impenetrably thick jungle as well as more open savannah. The forest borders on sand dunes marking the edge of the Sahara Desert. Sightings of the girls and their captors have been reported in neighboring Cameroon and Chad.

In Chibok, the town's population is under stress.

"There are families that are putting up four and five other families," local leader Bitrus said, adding that food stocks are depleted. Livestock has been looted by Boko Haram so villagers are arriving empty handed. Worst of all, no one is planting though it is the rainy season, he said.

"There is a famine looming," he warned.

Chibok and nearby villages are targets because they are enclaves of staunch Christians in predominantly Muslim north Nigeria.

The number of soldiers guarding Chibok has increased from 15 to about 200 since the kidnapping but they have done little to increase security in Chibok, said Bitrus. The soldiers often refuse to deploy to villages under attack though there is advance warning 90 percent of the time, he said.

Last month the extremists took control and raised their black flags over two villages within 30 kilometers (18 miles) of Chibok. Last week they ordered residents of another village just 16 kilometers (10 miles) away to clear out, Bitrus said. Every village in the neighboring Damboa area has been attacked and sacked, and all the villages bordering Cameroon have been burned and are deserted, Bitrus said, quoting residents who fled.

The attacks continue despite the fact the military placed the area under a state of emergency in May 2013.

Residents feel so abandoned that they appealed this month for the United Nations to send troops to protect them. The U.N. has repeatedly urged Nigeria's government to live up to its international responsibility to protect citizens.

President Goodluck Jonathan insists his government and military are doing everything possible to ensure the girls' release. The Defense Ministry says it knows where they are but fears any military campaign could lead to their deaths.

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau in a new video released this week repeated his demands that Jonathan release detained extremists in exchange for the girls — an offer Jonathan has so far refused.

After three months, few Chibok residents believe all the schoolgirls will ever return home.

___

Associated Press writers Haruna Umar in Maiduguri, Nigeria and Lekan Oyekanmi in Abuja, Nigeria, contributed to this report.
http://news.yahoo.com/11-parents-nigerias-abducted-girls-die-100808502.html
PropertiesRe: How We Built The "Luxury Block Of Flats" In Enugu by Pergrace: 9:10am On Jan 09, 2014
Degis: I dey report for class o!. Make una shift jare. Anybody wey make noise for this no go graduate o! Oya, efribody, eyes front and say Good morning, Sir to our Professor
grin grin grin grin
Morning All,am also reporting to class.
AutosRe: Mighty Man Of Valor **Pergrace Of NL Pre-Order 2004 Toyota Rav4 From Fhemmmy** by Pergrace: 6:54pm On Jan 08, 2014
Fhemmmy: Smelling Nigerian waters already . . . .
Amen ohhhh
AutosRe: Free Vin Checks And Reports by Pergrace: 11:15am On Jan 04, 2014
inze: AutoCheck Vehicle History Report
2004 Toyota RAV4 Base / L
Report Run Date: 2014-01-04 04:39:23.810 EST
Report Summary
Class: CUV - Entry Level
Engine: 2.4L I4 SFI
Country of Assembly: Japan
Vehicle Age: 10 year(s)
Calculated Owners: N/A
VIN: JTEHD20V446004355
Year : 2004
Make : Toyota
Model: RAV4 Base / L
Style/Body: Hardtop 4D

This Vehicle's AutoCheck Score
Thanks Inze
AutosRe: Free Vin Checks And Reports by Pergrace: 2:09pm On Jan 03, 2014
Please,help me check this vin no:
JTEHD20V446004355

Thanks and happy new year.
InvestmentRe: ANOTHER OIL BOOM!!! Is Secretly Happening In Nigeria!!! by Pergrace: 12:06pm On Dec 30, 2013
akoako: will you like to discuss more details on this opportunity? if so, describe briefly here what it involves to gain some trust from your readers.

seconded
Nairaland GeneralFirst Flash Mob At MMIA Lagos by Pergrace(op): 7:39am On Dec 20, 2013
AutosRe: Mighty Man Of Valor **Pergrace Of NL Pre-Order 2004 Toyota Rav4 From Fhemmmy** by Pergrace: 1:44pm On Dec 19, 2013
Oga Fhemmmy,

I got the dock receipt.
Thanks
PoliticsRe: Abia Distributes 202 Cars To Youths by Pergrace: 11:52am On Dec 12, 2013
Okija_juju: We dont need to come together to fight this..

When Nelson Mandela started the revolution that made him who he is today, he didnt need a crowd.
When Mohammed Bouazizi started the Arab spring by dousing himself with fuel and putting his lighters up, he didnt need a crowd..
When Mahatma Ghandi went on a hunger strike in protest, he didnt need a crowd.


My brother, if you want a revolution, then start it by revolting..

the origin of every ripple is always a small occurence at the epicenter..
@ Okija...honestly have been thinking of a way to implement this revolt..wetin person don see for this country is enoughcry
BusinessRe: A Humble Plea To . Please Refund My Money. Please!!! by Pergrace: 1:10pm On Dec 11, 2013
Pls,its good to choose "payment on delivery".. I did placed some orders from both Jumia & Konga for 11 days now.I am yet to receive them. cry cry cry
FamilyRe: The Birth Of Our Baby Girl Realtime Updates by Pergrace: 10:42pm On Dec 09, 2013
Congratulations
BusinessRe: Konga Or Jumia: Which Is More Reliable? by Pergrace: 8:50am On Dec 09, 2013
Konga is worst compare to Jumia..Though Konga's prices are cheaper than Jumia.

I am yet to receive my first order from Konga..its been over 8 days now cry cry cry cry cry
AutosRe: Mighty Man Of Valor **Pergrace Of NL Pre-Order 2004 Toyota Rav4 From Fhemmmy** by Pergrace: 10:04am On Dec 06, 2013
Fhemmmy: Nice to see you here, Sir . . . Thanks for your business
It's a pleasure..
EducationRe: Truck Rams Into Classroom, Kills 7 Children In Aba by Pergrace: 8:49am On Dec 06, 2013
May their Souls RIP cry cry cry
PoliticsRe: Is A Nigerian Nelson Mandela A Possibility? by Pergrace(op): 8:49am On Dec 06, 2013
NosoChic: A possibility ... YES
A Reality..........NO
cheesy cheesy
Foreign AffairsRe: Nelson Mandela's Life In Pictures by Pergrace: 8:46am On Dec 06, 2013
His visit to Nigeria

PoliticsIs A Nigerian Nelson Mandela A Possibility? by Pergrace(op): 8:20am On Dec 06, 2013
We know for sure that very few leaders in world history so far have attracted the kind of uncommon love and bonding enjoyed by Mandela from his countrymen. Imaginably, reports that so and so Nigerian leader or former leader is hospitalised usually evoke feelings ranging from mild indifference to the dismissive Yoruba expression, “Onpe ko to ku” (What is stopping him from dying?) Sociologists tell us that such scornful utterances, pungent jokes and ridicule are ways in which afflicted societies get back at unpopular leaders. In other words, sooner than later, the rascality, double dealing and negligence of leaders have ways of catching up with them at least in the dismissive responses of popular culture.

But let us go back to the question of whether a Nigerian Mandela is on the cards or whether it is no more than an idle fantasy in the current circumstances. In bringing up this poser, this writer is well aware of excuses that have been offered on behalf of a sadly diminished political class such as we have. For example, some have argued that the division of the Nigerian public sphere into ethnic and religious war camps forecloses the possibility of a Nigerian Mandela. You can only have, they argue, an Igbo, Ijaw, Nupe or Yoruba Mandela because the reception and perception of leadership are affected by ethnic and religious prejudices.

At first blush, the argument seems persuasive; when you inspect it closely, however, in the light of South Africa’s own fractured, interracial public sphere, it falls apart easily. Mandela, wrote himself into iconic status, not just by the crucifix of 27 years in detention, 18 of which were spent in the lime quarries of the infamous and harshly isolated Robben Island prison, but perhaps more importantly by forging a “rainbow nation” out of the assortment of races that constitute South Africa. He not only refused to revenge his cruel victimisation under apartheid rule, but managed to persuade neo-apartheid forces under the Africaneer Volksfront Coalition, led by Gen. Constand Vilijden from precipitating a disastrous civil war in the heady days of 1993. If heroic resistance to white supremacist rule symbolised by dramatic suburban riots and relentless guerrilla tactics of the African National Congress created the opening for ending apartheid, it was Mandela’s statesmanship that enlarged that opening into a doorway that permitted the birth of the South African nation.

To get back to the point: Ethnicity and religious divisions even when intemperate cannot be the excuse for not having a Nigerian Mandela. Indeed, it may well be the turf as we saw in South Africa and in Abraham Lincoln’s the United States for great statesmen to arise, provided they are willing to place the larger interests of the nation above their personal conveniences.

There is the point, too, that by the time Mandela stepped down as president he could easily have converted his larger-than-life stature into extended, if not permanent rule. Conscious of legacy, and the need to engineer decent political values, he allowed a succession to Thabo Mbeki, a worthy leader in his own right who earned himself a good place in contemporary South African history.

In contrast, we do not see Nigerian leaders who are willing to forfeit the privileges of office in order to promote enduring values or even the survival in the short-term of a nation torn apart by the desperate hustle of its political class for office at any cost. Under the military, the norm was to proclaim what Larry Diamond famously called “transitions without end” in which programmes of so-called democratisation were used as pretexts for elongated personal rule. In the civilian dispensation which began in 1999, the recurrent refrain had been: No vacancy in Aso Rock. Ample sanctions of course await those foolhardy enough to contest the truth of that battle cry. You can check this out by recalling the travails of a former vice-president, Abubakar Atiku, and, currently, those of the Rivers State governor, Chibuike Amaechi.

Let me digress to posit that apartheid for all its abhorrent discrimination, left in South Africa an infrastructure, even if unevenly of political values into which its emergent black leaders were socialised, apart from substantial infrastructural development in the major cities which make the country look like many parts of the First World. Mandela was in a sense produced by that culture even as he opposed its extremities, drawing on, both in protest and in conciliation, essential elements of his African roots to produce a unique blend.

Back to Nigeria; our leadership deficit is matched only by the regression of values and of decency in political and social life. When was the last time any political office holder resigned their appointment on the ground of public opprobrium? Even when they face a storm, they inform us about which political enemies are behind it, rather than bow out honourably in order not to pre-empt public inquiry. Mandela gave himself up, poured his entire life into the struggle to first liberate his people and then to elevate their status and dignity. He cared less if he died or had to quit office in this all consuming enterprise.

For as long as Nigerian politicians and their praise singers do not see beyond their noses and material comforts; for as long as office seeking for short-term benefits is their preoccupation, such as it is today, so long will the prospect of a Nigerian Mandela appear like a sour jest. Worse still, a reprobate political class might bring the national roof crashing down on everybody.

We cannot foreclose however the possibility, even if currently, dim of a Mandela arising from the fringes and the shadows of the current Nigerian impasse. After all, we must keep hope alive in order to surmount or tide over depressing times.

source: http://www.punchng.com/politics/is-a-nigerian-nelson-mandela-a-possibility/
AutosRe: Mighty Man Of Valor **Pergrace Of NL Pre-Order 2004 Toyota Rav4 From Fhemmmy** by Pergrace: 12:05pm On Dec 05, 2013
Subscribing......... wink wink wink wink
PoliticsRe: Jarus Discusses Nigeria, Youths & Social Media On Channels, LTV And Bentv by Pergrace: 7:32pm On Nov 25, 2013
Jarus I haff see you... cheesy
SportsRe: Brazil 2014: No Guarantee For Keshi Yet - NFF by Pergrace: 2:42pm On Nov 25, 2013
NFF sabi kill person morale... cry cry cry cry cry
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Cardiff Vs Manchester United (2 - 2) On 24th Nov 2013 by Pergrace: 7:13pm On Nov 24, 2013
smiley wink

SportsRe: Kelechi Iheanacho Declared Missing by Pergrace: 1:43pm On Nov 23, 2013
enitanpopoola: May God punish anyone that wants to spoil this boy's future!
Seconded
PoliticsRe: Happy Birthday To President Goodluck Jonathan! by Pergrace: 10:10am On Nov 20, 2013
Happy birthday Mr President..Long Live Nigeria..
PoliticsRe: How Is Electricity Supply After Final Take Over by Pergrace: 4:46pm On Nov 19, 2013
possibilita: oh boy mo na no vex oh,but ah day enjoy light here since around 4pm it 12 now light still day.
which area do u stay?
PoliticsRe: How Is Electricity Supply After Final Take Over by Pergrace: 11:24pm On Nov 17, 2013
Pergrace: No light for the past two weeks. My area is miniorlu,off ada george road,ph cry embarassed embarassed
Three weeks counting and there's still no light. cry cry cry
Jobs/VacanciesRe: 10 Silly Mistakes Job Seekers Make by Pergrace: 6:49pm On Nov 17, 2013
Seun: You're lying
grin grin grin
AutosRe: @-{- Mint 2004 Volkswagen Touareg SUV, Leather **Deal Of The Day - 2.2M SOLDDD** by Pergrace: 1:56pm On Nov 14, 2013
This ride make sense die..

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