Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria - Politics (3) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria (51050 Views)
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Nobody: 7:53pm On May 10, 2016*. Modified: 8:08pm On May 10, 2016 |
Eugenedimgba:Sorry! I know it pains! Wailers after reading the Post be like.........!
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| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by modath(f): 7:53pm On May 10, 2016 |
omenka:How good news about one's country go depress person? This is beyond hate, it's deep psychological order. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by ooshinibos: 7:54pm On May 10, 2016 |
adeyemi2015:The UK do not force the Nigerians corrupt officials to come and dump their loot in UK ....and the Switzerland too . the UK government have always prosecuted money laundering cases but the will not stop investment indirectly injected into the UK economy , its common sense |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by ooshinibos: 7:58pm On May 10, 2016 |
but honestly o , aint we corrupt , I was passing through the airport and the custom officers were openly asking for *oney , I think this corruption is part of our culture ... |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Maski87: 7:59pm On May 10, 2016 |
Can see all of them abusing Cameron for telling the truth there is no need for that if you are stupid enough to steal your people's money and go and buy property in another man's country thereby impoverishing your country and supporting the economy of another country you deserve what you get. Nigeria is a fabulously corrupt country there is no excuse for what We are doing to our people |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by paix(m): 8:00pm On May 10, 2016 |
john4reala:Yesterday was 9th. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by currentbrands(m): 8:00pm On May 10, 2016 |
'' We should not forget that by providing a safe haven for corrupt assets, the UK and its Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies are a big part of the world’s corruption problem.” That ends the news! |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Nobody: 8:02pm On May 10, 2016 |
ooshinibos:Are you indirectly blaming PMB for the Transparency International's Report?! |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by kokomilala(m): 8:03pm On May 10, 2016 |
Pathologically, Britain is even more corrupt than any other country, if corruption is seen from the prism of coveting other land's wealth.They have built their fading empire on colonial plunder.They spent about 100 yrs in Nigeria; 300 in India, about 200? in the US; about another 100 in South Africa, something similar in Australia and New Zealand and so on. Their British Councils all over their former colonies act as bases for the grounding and extension of their hegemony. They made sure structures that would help their former colonies develop were never on ground before they left.Nkrumah's Ghana; the fledgling democracy in Nigeria,..The list is endless! We are conscious of corruption in our system, but Cameron-a game addict-shouldn't be making judgements on us. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by 9jatatafo(m): 8:07pm On May 10, 2016 |
UK is more corrupt than Nigeria because they accept stolen money in their banks and also allow the looters to buy landed properties there. A case of a kettle calling pot black |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Nobody: 8:08pm On May 10, 2016 |
Descartes:So Garba Shehu is now working with TI?! What will it cost you to click on the link and confirm the Writer by yourself?!
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| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Nobody: 8:08pm On May 10, 2016 |
Haba you guys shouldn't feel offended by his comments Nigeria is corrupt though ![]() |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by WATERLee1: 8:08pm On May 10, 2016 |
Wow, he got served |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by ooshinibos: 8:09pm On May 10, 2016 |
adeyemi2015:No , í blame all Nigerians for putting up with corrupt leaders , we in Nigeria have allowed corruption because we accept it as normal , 80 percent of Nigeria all genetically corrupt , even Buhari cannot change it locally , I see corruption at all levels ,it has become a culture which buhari cannot alter |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by podosci(m): 8:09pm On May 10, 2016 |
ooshinibos:Sometimes i see policemen who beg for 10naira in a busy city with everyone seeing them... Thats not the shocking part... The fact that nobody even cares, evebody goes about their normal business is shocking... We need another another War agaisnt indecipline spear headed by Gen Burutai. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by dragunov: 8:10pm On May 10, 2016 |
sonnie10:Attention seekeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeer! |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by udoh2k: 8:12pm On May 10, 2016 |
adeyemi2015:Continues into one yr of pmb/apc administration |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by MrPresident1: 8:20pm On May 10, 2016 |
dragunov:How is he an attention seeker? Has he lied? The truth will set you free. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Gaddafithe2nd(m): 8:31pm On May 10, 2016 |
Seened:Western nations are hypocrites. They don't practice what they preach. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by back2sender: 8:33pm On May 10, 2016 |
Descartes:See one of the caricatures who bubu has rendered jobless, no more loot money again to sustain them |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by yaki84: 8:37pm On May 10, 2016 |
politricks:u forget so soon that 13 months ago u were in our shoes. rejoicing over every negative utterances against naija. anything that put naija in bad light was welcomed by u guys so it can be a campaign material for una. dont blame us for acting mysterious, we r just doing what apc taught us. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Favored4gud: 8:41pm On May 10, 2016 |
Read it again and understand what Cameron is indicating. He is saying him as a representative of UK and other Nations that allow such act, are part of the problem. No hypocrisy there. When someone finally admit they are part of a problem and decides to call out others that are part of a problem and want a solution and not be part of it any more. Its like you stealing n giving me to keep n one day I say I don't want to be part of it anymore and call out on others that are part of it. So we can keep a clean slate. My hope is that they honor their words or commitment. politricks: |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by olajide8(m): 8:46pm On May 10, 2016*. Modified: 9:02pm On May 10, 2016 |
sonnie10:The Writer Samuel Ajayi Cc: C-in-C of the fed Rep of Nig Dear writer, On behalf of the president of the federal government of the republic of nigeria, I send you my best wishes and regards. With these few points, though full of a lot of sarcasm, from you. I would like to stress this point once more "I am for no one and belong to everyone" and the efforts put forward by the current administration headed by my humble self. I would like to draw your attention to a few issues, 1. When I came into power on may 29 I meet an economy that was borrowing money to pay salaries 2. I also met a government that had less then $28b in foreign reserves 3. I met a country in which 3 states apart from their capitals were in the control of insurgents, killing and making farrows into the interlands, bombing and killing innocent peace loving nigerians, of which I happened to be a victim and for the mercy of God and the bullet proof truck I was in maybe the story today may have been different, this happened in kaduna- I doubt you have experienced any thing like this, apart from hearing it on radio and seeing it on tv. 4. My administration met a country overtaken with a lot of kidnapping on our high ways 5. Doctors strike and challenges in the educational sector, as a result of the refusal of the past administration to look into the complains of the players 6. I met a government in which people with no know form of industry own billions and owned a lot of private jets at the expense of millions that were hungry and begging for arms 7. We have been faced with cattle rustling in which I have been a victim in time past. 8. The power situation I met on ground shows that we had the potential to produce but, distribution was the problem, thou as of the time I took over unofficially we were generating 4000mw, for a population of 170m nigerians and that was within the rainy season when we had the potential to do more. 9. We also had the issue of theft of the common patrimony of nigeria, "OIL" because whether we like it or not until the day their becomes another country split out of nigeria- which would not happen in my time, (all the land mass represent the sovereign state of nigeria, of which is my current constituency) by those said to be watching the pipelines, government could not account for what was coming in(ships) and what was being taken out crude, we also had illegal refineries dotted across the length and breath of the niger-delta, causing oil spills. 10. I also met a monopolised economy that depended heavily on importation for everything from tooth picks to machinery and food, we were already importing garlic. 11. I met a bureaucracy that I thought was efficient and needed a bit of tinkering to make it work, but from the padding of budgets to increasing allocations in the budget we have been able to identify the problem 12. I also observed this issue of election funding, and that's part of the reasons why, I raised my funds for elections from those that bought scratch cards, I raise N500m and ordered they stop selling my campaign donation scratch card. I also diligently, monitored the amounts coming into the account, knowing fully well that he whom comes to equity must come with clean hands. 13. For this purpose, finally we visited the petition of the past CBN governor, after implementing the single treasury account, and on the surface discovered $2.1b stolen outright and another $15b, plus $3.8m foreign aid for antiroviral drugs, so many road contracts allocated, designed and executed on paper but upon visiting - nothing had taken place, e.g lagos ibadan expressway, 2nd niger bridge kaduna kano high way to mention but a few. Monies gotten as income were looted and a handful of nigerians could actually fund th nigerian budget for 7years with what had been stolen. My fellow nigerian, I am working asidiously to correct all these ills in the structure and polity of the country, I would no also shy away from allow the EFCC to do their job, like investigating any politician if he belongs to my party or otherwise, I must state that all that has been probed have direct payments from the CBN some banks and the movement of these monies shows outright stealing. Assurances of my highest regards, as that boy (nnamdi kanu), that also did not collect permit to broadcast a radio, causing civil unrest and death, came into nigeria without either using his nigerian or british passports needs company. For the purpose of decorum, an insult on the person of my wife who is neither a political appointee or elected appointee does not sound well, as the international community is also reading. Your commander in chief President M. Buhari 2015-2019 |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by ooshinibos: 8:53pm On May 10, 2016 |
podosci:this has been going on for years has a bad habit which eventually rolled into a culture ,Nigerians now expect to pay bribes even outside Nigeria , Buhari cannot solved it locally , he can resolved the one in the federal levels , but how will he resolve the ones in our local street , local council office , market place , local banks , local schools ,Nigerian embassies , local pension office , universities admin office , local police stations , local hospitals , local govt pharmacies , fish market , meat market ..even tomato seller , government receptions ..i can go on for ever .... |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by phenzeek: 8:55pm On May 10, 2016 |
The fact that someone or some people chose to defend a generally known fact shows how currupt this country is. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Laid2001: 8:59pm On May 10, 2016 |
The only sin of PMB on his anti-curroption fight is that he is not arresting all thieves. But he has not arrested a single clean, honest man. So, dear wailers, your saviour was in government for more than 5 years and his party for 16 years, you had your opportunity to arrest all the thieves but you could not even arrest any. Yet you will not let the one who can arrest atleast some of the yam eaters to do it.!! For God's sake PMB was elected to clean the federal government and the governors are to do same at the state level. All previous ministers, All MDA directors, all the yam eaters at Federal level, who fortunately were PDP members, will be scrutinized. If he leaves out any yam eaters at Federal levels, another government will catch them if and when PMB/APC leaves government.!! However, I expect the state governments to go after their own yam eaters as well. They all have the powers under the constitution to do that and should not be waiting for PMB to do that for them! |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by ooshinibos: 9:03pm On May 10, 2016 |
the David Cameron is not lying and being transparent actually .. I bet he knows more than most of us , he has access to all the deposit of Nigerian govt looters and co ..the deposits actually help the UK economy via the tax collected on the interest the Nigeria money generates ..Nigerians you don lose again ..keep bring the money here |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by FxMallam: 9:08pm On May 10, 2016 |
ooshinibos:No disagreement however, the hypocrisy in all of it is that, they collect the money knowingly because it helps their economy. If he is really concerned, they can pass laws that audit accounts of known politicos or make it more difficult to use their country as a storage shed for looted funds. IMO, the guy was just chyking the Queen to show that he's working. |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by DealZ(m): 9:10pm On May 10, 2016 |
That david cameron abi camera sef na better hypocrite, no be dis idiot name comot 4 panama papers wey him com giv one stupid excuse say na him papa run d package when him mates de resign by d mere mention of their names in such papers....oga buhari atleast now u go knw say all those white fuckas no send us, make u de do dealings with them eye to eye no go giv dem ur back o, its hy time these indians chinese n whites go de fvk back where they came coz their help get 2face |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Lugano(m): 9:14pm On May 10, 2016 |
David How much your Papa hide for Panama? |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Rayhutar(m): 9:27pm On May 10, 2016 |
Chaii Nigerian youth, in an effort to defend Buhari, you guys have lost your sense of reasoning, imagine politicians stealing public fund and investing in another man country, and the citizens is busy blaming the innocent country of where the money is invested as been corrupt, nawaa oo!!! in Germany, they need more investment and if anybody bring in huge amount of money to buy new estates and build new companies that will generate more jobs for their citizens, how will their government stop the inflow of the needed capital to boost their GDP, they beg or force your thieving politicians to bring the money to them, Africans mostly Nigerian corruption is a disgrace to humanity, you guys should continue to blame innocent countries that is receiving the booties from your country to boost their economy, |
| Re: Transparency International Responds To Cameron Comments Regarding Nigeria by Nobody: 9:35pm On May 10, 2016 |
#IStandWithCameron #BritishBanksNotResponsibleForCorruptLeaders |
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