PetroDolla2020's Posts
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Thank you, my brother. Tell those illiterate mudder fuggerx ![]() SUFFERInSMILIIN: |
The problem with you nigerians is that you like to boast too much. You guys forget that football is played on the field, not with mouth Every single time Nigeria is playing Ghana, Nigerians will come out talking big and boasting. But almost every time Ghana had won How many times have Eguavoen won as a coach against Ghana? Was he not the coach when the Black Stars beat Super Eagles 4-1? Even your goalie trainer Agu or whatever his name is, had his tooth broken during a crucial game at the Kumasi stadium during his playing days. He never found that tooth till today. ![]() As a Ghanaian, I am not losing any sleep over the game with Nigeria. Ghana will win at Cape Coast and get a draw at Abuja. Case closed ![]() 13large: |
Forget about the World Cup. Ghana has the ticket already Beloved03: |
Rubbish talk. You mean Nigeria opposing African or whatever was a reason for Ghana not to host it? Where did you get that nonsense from? You sound like a deluded mudder fuggerz. Can Nigeria dictate to Ghana how to run its affairs? scully95: |
Gutters are not dirty in Nigeria? tonyashburton: |
Why will Ghana “pack the bus” against Nigeria? Ghana is beating Nigeria in March. Get that into your head, huh? 13large: |
Please leave Ghana alone. Haba! Oya, which country is cheaper nigeria or Cameroon? Make una leave Ghana alone ooh Haboseyday: |
No wonder nigeria is a shambolic shiithole the country is a zoo. People are being kidnapped upanddown for a ransom of a bottle of coke and gala. What is life expectancy in Nigeria how many Nigerians are gainfully employed? And why are Nigerians running to Ghana? nigeria is the poverty capital of the world nigeria is the kidnap capital how many hours of electricity do you get in that sh1thole?tempusfugit: |
Okay, when you go to change naira into cedis, tell the person changing the money to add the zeros to the value, huh? ![]() jimyjames: |
Don't talk rubbish, huh? Talk about things you know about huh? You were in Ghana, huh? How did your being in Ghana help you to arrive at 20 million Ghanaians are without electricity? You were in Ghana for a period, I am Ghanaian living in Ghana and you think you know more about Ghana than me? You mean you didn't see any highway in Ghana? Well, I don't blame you. Most Nigerians don't see any good thing in Ghana. They live in Ghana, insult Ghana and Ghanaians, and still don't want to go back to Nigeria. By the way, the Accra-Kumasi highway is under construction and should be completed soon. Have you been to Norway before? Norway is considered one of the richest countries in the world, yet you almost all the roads in Norway are two-way lanes. Ghana today is okay with two-lane roads. Accra is a developing town? Well, life expectancy in Ghana is 65. what is your life expectancy in your own country? people are not being kidnapped on the streets as they do in Nigeria. Ghana is not the poverty capital of the world [s] tempusfugit:[/s] |
not true. 90 percent of Ghanaians have access to electricity. tempusfugit: |
you are sick in the head. You sound desperate to appease nigerians, huh? Look, I speak my mind. I don't fear anybody, except God. Even my own H.E President Akufo Addo I don't fear him. so why should I give a fvck about what you or any mudder fuggerx nigerian think? Take your "creating unnecessary enmity" nonsense somewhere else. why should I care if nigerians see Ghanaians as enemies? Isn't that what they have always felt towards Ghanaians? Stop talking like a f00l, huh? ![]() [s] mdntiri:[/s] |
Fuckeduppedness Many here know PetroDolla to be a very nice guy now don't be judgemental, huh?theenchanter: |
Fvck ya coward. I shouldn't even have wasted my precious time on a f00l like you. Fvck you again A very f00lish goat trying to be relevant kwasiesem ![]() [s] mdntiri:[/s] |
I don't expect you to understand. Are you not a Nigerian? owing China is not the same as owing multilateral or even commercial lenders. Go and do your research. You will know that kenya faces more risk than Ghana when it comes to foreign debts na wao for una oooh ![]() GeneralDae: |
sex starved? How is that possible? if anything it is the opposite By the way, your Nigerian sisters don full ground for this side ooh. And those ones know how to swallow pr1ck e no be small thing oooh ![]() theenchanter: |
You think so? Millions are not starving to death in my country. China is not threatening to seize my country for debts owed. and in my country, daughters and wives are not given to tourists to ravish for a dollar or two ![]() [s] gallivant:[/s] |
Tell me, why do nigerians give birth like pigs? They keep producing children as if their lives depend on it. And they end becoming a nuisance to the whole world is it that you nigerians like sex, sex ,sex or what exactly? theenchanter: |
consider it an honour that I can descend soo low to speak to you ![]() [s] theenchanter:[/s] |
millions of kenyans are starving to death as we speak. I know you are hungry and frustrated. But how is that my fault? [s] gallivant:[/s]
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nigeria's education may be the cheapest, it also the most useless. Are you aware of DHL MBAs? People register for MBA courses and never step into a class but get their certificates and stuff by DHL? Most of the public universities in Nigeria are not even fit for human habitation. They have been neglected and very shabby. Is not better to charge a reasonable fee and get the system moving well, than to charge low fees and provide facilities and standards that are crap? Most of the lecturers in your public institutions are very corrupt theenchanter: |
fvck you! fvck your entire generation. You are big fooool Yes, I am daring you to step into the ring with PetroDolla If dem born you well, try that nonsense with me. stvpid f00l ![]() PetroDolla will eat you raw, maggot Fooolish goat ![]() [s] mdntiri:[/s] |
stop talking rubbish on my posts, huh? Next time you respond to my post, I will descend hard on you. Nonsense. stay in your lane. who the fvck do you think you are? I am in good mood today so I'll ignore your stvpid talk, for now. Next time I may not in a good mood ![]() [s] mdntiri:[/s] |
Nigeria has highest number of sex slaves in Europe, 24 pimps go on trial in France oh dear oh dear nigerian pr0stitutes don full everywhere for Ghana ooh nobody wan fvck them sef, even for 50 pesewas ![]() Prostitutes on the roll pr0stitution is the second highest foreign exchange earners for the shiithole after oil those women are really drilling their own oil for yoonder ooh chai, roforoforofo oh boy, this thing dey sweet ma belle no be small ![]() poverty capital, kidnap capital, stvpidity capital and now pr0stitution capital of the world. ma nigerian people I dey salute una ooh ![]() Twenty-four suspected members of a sex trafficking ring accused of forcing Nigerian women into prostitution in France go on trial Wednesday. They risk 10 years in jail each if convicted. Nigerians now outnumber Chinese or Eastern European sex workers on the streets of France and some other European countries. ![]() Nigeria was the main country of origin of the migrants arriving across the Mediterranean to Italy in 2016 and 2017, though their numbers have since dropped. Many of the arrivals were women and girls lured to Europe with false promises of jobs as hairdressers or seamstresses, only to find themselves selling sex on arrival to repay their debts. Last year, 15 members of a Paris-based female-led pimping ring known as the “Authentic Sisters” were sentenced to up to 11 years in prison for forcing girls into sex slavery in France. Many were themselves former trafficking victims-turned-perpetrators. Similar gangs have also been dismantled in Italy and Britain. The investigation in Lyon, where police estimate half the city’s sex workers are Nigerian, began after authorities received a tip about a Nigerian pastor accused of exploiting several sex workers who lived in apartments he owned. The pastor, Stanley Omoregie, has denied the charges, which include aggravated pimping and slavery. But in the transcript of a conversation submitted to the court, he is heard saying he wanted “those with beautiful bodies, who can be controlled, not those that cause problems.” The prosecution has presented him as the kingpin of a family-based syndicate made up of 10 women and 14 men, including one of Europe’s most wanted women, Jessica Edosomwan, accused of recruiting destitute women in Nigeria for the sex trade in Lyon, Nimes and Montpellier. Edosomwan, who is believed to be on the run in the Benelux countries, Italy or Germany, will be tried in absentia. – From prostitution to pimping – The UN has estimated that 80 percent of young Nigerian women arriving in Italy — their first port of call in Europe — are already in the clutches of prostitution networks, or quickly fall under their control. The accused in Lyon cover the entire gamut of sex trafficking activities, from iron-fisted “madams” and violent pimps as well as drivers of the vans in which the women perform sexual acts, and those tasked with laundering the proceeds of the trafficking. Prosecutors estimate that 17 alleged victims, aged 17 to 38, made up to 150,000 euros ($166,000) a month for the syndicate, selling sex for as little as 10 euros. Most of the women come from Benin City, capital of Nigeria’s southern Edo State, a human trafficking hotbed with a long history of dispatching women and men to Europe to earn money to send back home. Many told investigators they had taken part in “juju” or black magic rituals before leaving Nigeria, during which they promised to repay the money they owed for their passage to Europe. Many of the woman took the perilous migrant trail across the Sahara Desert to Libya and then across the Mediterranean to Italy before winding up in Lyon. Among the accused is a 28-year-old former prostitute who was herself released from sex slavery after paying off her debts and who in turn brought over another young woman from Nigeria. Months of police wiretaps and surveillance led to the arrest of the suspects between September 2017 and January 2018. AFP
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ooh naija which one be multidimentional poverty again? chai, nigeria will never stop disgracing Africa oh dear oh dear ma belle want burst with laughter oooh ![]() Nigeria is in multidimensional poverty ![]() In addition, sanitation levels are poor with only 26.5 percent reported as having access to clean drinking water sources and sanitation facilities Nigerians were collectively triggered by a United Nations Development Program (UNDP) report that 98 million of us are living in multidimensional poverty. ![]() The number was not alarming—after all, Nigeria is barely a year into its reign as the poverty capital of the world , but the reference to multidimensional poverty sparked fright. Had Nigeria cracked a new layer of poverty? ![]() Understanding multidimensional poverty For a long time, poverty was defined in monetary terms: people were considered poor if they lived on less than a specific (dollar) amount a day. But while income and wealth are pretty good indicators of welfare, it has become apparent that we miss out a lot of relevant features of human welfare if we only focus on how much money someone has. For instance, a household could be living on more than a dollar a day but still be unable to meet primary healthcare or sanitation needs. These and other factors are not adequately captured by the monetary-based measures of poverty, even though they are also important indicators of human welfare. Thus, the methods now collectively referred to as the non-monetary measurements of poverty were developed to assess the indicators that would otherwise be overlooked by the monetary-based methods. The UNDP developed a non-monetary measure of poverty called the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) in collaboration with the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI). The MPI assesses ten indicators across three main dimensions: health, education, and standard of living. Based on the MPI, individuals who are deprived in at least one-third of the weighted indicators are judged to be living in multidimensional poverty. What does this mean for Nigeria? This means that poverty goes beyond not having money. Nigeria’s problem is that millions of Nigerians do not have access to the most basic of resources and economic goods, from food to shelter to medical services. For example, Nigeria has one of the highest maternal and child mortality rates in the world—the latter is included in the MPI. ![]() Another measure of poverty included in the MPI is school attendance, i.e. the number of school-aged children not in school. In 2018, Nigeria was reported to have over 13 million children out of school, which shows the extent of the country’s educational depravity. Meanwhile, on the stand of living dimension, indicators such as electricity, housing, and sanitation have significantly influenced the extent of Nigeria's multidimensional poverty. About 20 million households have no access to power, and up to 24 million people are reported to be homeless in Nigeria. Finally, barely over a quarter of the population has access to clean drinking water, almost the same proportion that reportedly defecate in the open. Once these statistics are considered, it is less surprising that Nigeria has so many people considered multidimensionally poor. These realities are correlated but do not end with not having enough money. The multidimensional approach to poverty also helps us evaluate assertions like “5 million Nigerians have been lifted out of extreme poverty in three years”. Wherever you may stand on the credibility of the claim, the multidimensional approach is a reminder not to get too swayed by a simple income assessment. Some may be earning marginally more than a dollar a day but remain poor in every meaningful sense. Extreme poverty vs multidimensional poverty It is important to note that the World Bank reports that multidimensional poverty is generally one and a half times higher than monetary poverty. While not exactly true in Nigeria, we see a similar trend. Nigeria had 87 million people categorised as extremely poor; however, this year’s UNDP data estimates 98 million Nigerians are living in multidimensional poverty. This is understandable as the multidimensional approach takes a broader view of poverty, so is likely to include those not considered financially poor. As a broader measure of welfare, the multidimensional approach gives us a clearer view of how poverty affects the lives of Nigerians. Indeed it shows that beyond having little or no income, Nigerians are also poor because they are unable to access basic social amenities; whether it is proper maternal and new-born care, functional educational institutions with trained teachers, proper housing, or clean drinking water. The implication this has for Nigerian policymakers is the obvious need to expand the scope of poverty alleviation beyond empowering people with handouts. There is a need to augment whatever efforts are being made with strategic interventions that address specific deprivations experienced by millions of Nigerians. What can Nigerians expect? Without strategic interventions which directly deal with the issues presented, Nigerians can expect to see grimmer reports like the one published by the UNDP. It is projected that by 2030, there will be at least 120 million Nigerians living in poverty, an estimate that was arrived at using a monetary-based approach of $1.90 per day. That figure would be substantially higher once we take a multidimensional view of poverty. Whatever way we look at it, Nigeria needs to act now.
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f00lish shameless nigerian goat the f00l is not even ashamed to say IT lives in Ghana? the stvpidity of a nigerian if Ghana is as bad as you claim, whhat are you fvcking doing in Ghana? Abi you need some slaps to set your brain correctly? ![]() Ghana this Ghana that and yet you live there as an economic refugee a very useless animal that has little value. stop taking that mpkummri shit, f00l ipob shithead ![]() [quote author=POKUASI2 post=110181548][/quote]
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oh dear oh dear what will these f00lish nigerians do without Ghanaians? even to conduct ordinary elections, the MUMUs have to come and learn from their Godfather Ghana I wonder why nigerians are soo daft ![]() 2023: Learn from Ghana, US, give Nigeria credible polls, Yakubu told ![]() The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, has counseled the reappointed chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, to go to[b] Ghana and United States and take a study from their electoral bodies on how to conduct free, fair, transparent and credible general election[/b] ![]() The PDP in a statement issued by its spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, Wednesday, restated its advice to Prof. Yakubu not to recourse to excuses but to use the more than two years ahead of the 2023 general election to “rejig our electoral commission and work out legislations and operational rules that will guarantee a free, credible and all-inclusive electoral process.” The statement read in part: “The party charges Prof. Yakubu to learn from the Ghana electoral commission , which is making more room for a more all-inclusive electoral process by kick-starting special voting system to enable personnel of critical service providers cast their ballots days ahead of the December 7, election date.” The PDP also advised the INEC chairman to study how the United States credibly conducted a keenly contested 2020 Presidential election without recourse to government influence and use of security to suppress the wishes of citizens as expressed at the polling units. The PDP urges the INEC chairman to engage political stakeholders for legislations, rules and field procedures, so as to curb violence, ensure the security of electoral materials and guarantee the safety of voters. “The INEC chairman should initiate processes and procedures that will guarantee prompt arrival of ballot materials, rapid accreditation and voting; instant transmission of results from polling units as well as seamless collation of figures. “Our party demands Prof. Yakubu to improve on legislations that restrict the involvement of security agencies in voting and collation processes, check underage and alien voters, vote-buying, alteration of results and manipulation of voter register. “ The PDP urges Prof. Yakubu to pursue an amendment to the electoral act to make it mandatory for INEC to publish voter register online, thus terminating the doctoring of the register and accreditation process. “It is therefore instructive to restate that with the new appointment, Prof Yakubu has been given an ample time and opportunity to redeem the image of the commission and give our nation a credible election that will be devoid of the failures, disappointments, miscarriages and litigations that characterized his first five years tenure. “Our party urges the re-appointed INEC chairman to note that the 2023 general election will hugely impact on the fate of over 200 million Nigerians. As such, he must ensure that the nation does not go down in his hands,” it added. Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/12/2023-learn-from-ghana-us-give-nigeria-credible-polls-yakubu-told/
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oh dear oh dear university graduates in that shiithole are stark illiterate. their own education minister talk am oo even their president sef is an illiterate Many Nigerian Graduates Can’t Read Or Write - Minister Of Education by Kingscee: 5:35am On Dec 12Onimisi Alao, Yola MINISTER of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu, has decried continuous fall in the standard of education in the country. Adamu, who spoke in Yola, the Adamawa State capital during official commissioning of completed projects in the college, lamented a situation in which graduates can neither read nor write in a tolerable manner. ![]() He said the situation was a cause for concern, adding that students and teachers need to sit up and face their tasks squarely if the situation is to be reversed. “Some graduates of tertiary institutions across the country cannot read or write applications,” said the minister who was represented by the Director of Tertiary Education in the Federal Ministry of Education, Hajia Rakiya Gambo Iliyasu. The minister elaborated that students and even graduates had been found to be unable to write one full sentence without multiple corrections needing to be made. The minister urged all stakeholders in the education sector to sit up to ensure that the decline in the value of education is bridged within the shortest time possible. Six completed projects which included a computer ICT Centre, sports centre, a centre for early childhood education, an undergraduate studies complex, among others, were commissioned during the ceremony at the FCE main campus in Yola. All the six complexes were built by the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), a fact acknowledged by the Provost of the college, Prof Abdul-Mumin Sa’ad, who earlier in his welcome address said: “Today, the Federal College of Education, courtesy of TETFund, is proud to have achieved major breakthrough in structures."
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madness runs in that very frustrated and hungry mudder fufgerx ![]() vankelvin: |
comot for road make I see better something nigeria is a zoo for f00ls. I won't even allow my dog to go that dustbin country ![]() Again, Burna goes on a rant, says Nigeria is home to largest number of unprogressive fools ![]() Burna Boy is at it again and this time, the target of his wrath are Nigerians, who he says represent the largest number of 'unprogressive fools.' Yesterday was unofficially declared as Burna Boy day on social media following his outburst after he was announced as one of the performers at the upcoming 2019 edition of the Coachella festival. Burna Boy had an issue with the way his name appeared on the line-up poster, complaining about the size of the character and this generated a lot of reactions all day on Twitter. Perhaps, taken aback by comments and opinions from a number of his citizens, Burna Boy has taken to his Instagram page to complain about the 'backward unprogressive' mind state of Nigerians. In a now deleted post shared on Friday, January 4, 2018, Burna Boy wrote, ''Don't worry, I know for a fact that my own country, NIGERIA is home to the largest number of backward Unprogressive FOOLS. I will still fight for them because they are not mentally advanced enough to fight for themselves. They will Forever have my Genuine undying LOVE. ![]() To the few proud Young AFRICAN Intellectuals who will not conform to whatever bullshit they are given. you are the Only Hope of AFRICA. God bless you all.'' He has also promised to hold a press conference where he will further explain the reasons and justification for his actions. [s][quote author=POKUASI2 post=110180917][/quote][/s]
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