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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Foreign Affairs / Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) (6195661 Views)
Am I The Only One Whos Tired Of This Kenya Is Ahead Thread / Femi Adesina: "I Don't Lie, No Matter What"; Nigerians React / Kenyans Are Far Behind Nigerians In Every Aspect – Fani-Kayode (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 6:13pm On May 19, 2019 |
Just30:I posted a chart from the same site,so I know you are lying. The numbers are rates and not ages.See it here from where I got it: https://www.worldlifeexpectancy.com/cause-of-death/road-traffic-accidents/by-country/. See screenshots:
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 6:14pm On May 19, 2019 |
Just30:that idiot does not know ajegunle exist also in abuja (mbape area slums) he was mistaking it to one of the biggest slums in lagos also know as Ajegunle. Well, many of this idiot Nigerians from southern part haven't been to Abuja before. So expect their ignorance on this subject. 3 Likes |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 6:16pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:Pain as usual. Why is your grammar so poor,boy.Are you sure you are a graduate as you claimed? 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 6:18pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Good, you are back to your dad job. That stupid question will have been answer perfectly well by your dad who also made the same observation. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 6:26pm On May 19, 2019 |
Just30:Three weeks ago indeed.I just showed you the recent picture. And I showed you recent pictures of Ghana's Eastern Corridor Road as well. 1 Like |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 6:30pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:Every time you open your mouth an English word dies. How can this one claim to have graduated from University of Ghana? A common roadside vulcanizer with a chinko phone. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 6:36pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Your dad have the same dream for you but unfortunately you disgrace him just like he disgrace his dad. It is a familiar problem in your family. Higher Education is above your limit. I mean your bloodline limit. You see, your desperation to identify mistakes has eroded you to even identify good grammar as same. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 6:49pm On May 19, 2019 |
Obaawonidiot you said, i am using a chinko phone? Lol. I am not bragging with you, but my sheep and lamb in Nigeria probably have a better life than you..... Well, i am using a chinko phone. idiot, let me give you a chance to use it in your next comeback. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 6:55pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:Oga vulcanizer, no graduate could ever write grammar as embarrassing as yours and no educated adult when beaten flat would end up crying and throwing shades at his tormentor's parents. It's a sign of deep hurt |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 7:02pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:You see your desperation to safe your dad from the same mess he put his father thru at his adolescent age?. Mr analphabetic slowpoke, non of your entire generation can match me either both in writting or speaking. Chill, you will still call on your dad for backup when i finnaly descend on him. Continue your Nazi job, while I keep on reminding you how nature screw you up. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 7:15pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Your entire grammatical postulation here is very wrong and it is a blunder. but who am i to police your grammar when your dad can do the dumb job. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 7:52pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:Well done,Accra vulcanizer. I can see you are learning fast. The only mistake is your wrongful use of the word "postulation ". And I will continue to highlight your pain.Like I said: only no educated adult when beaten flat would end up crying and throwing shades at his tormentor's parents.It's a clear sign of deep pain. 1 Like |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 7:53pm On May 19, 2019 |
Who notice obaawonidiot had made his second new moniker he created yesterday dormant. The idiot who nick name the country he is defending Nigeria is doom. The idiot is now contemplating of banning vaxx. Today beating is just that bad..... |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 7:54pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:Vulcanizer, You quoted the same comment twice out of desperation and anger. What's wrong with you? 1 Like |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 7:58pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Your dad deserve that accolade bro. Vaxx own you no explanation, i will have volunteer to educate you on the purpose of ""postulation"" in vaxx wordings since your dad is also learning. But unfortunately, nature screw you up on that. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 8:00pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Mr analphabetic slowpoke, Your dad deserve that remark? What is wrong with your dad? |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 8:12pm On May 19, 2019 |
68816419: Goat means Greatest of all Time so am definitely with the likes of CR7, Messi and Kobe Nobody cares what Nigeria is first in. What are cattle doing in Abuja? Is that not the Zoogeria they talk about? There was another fake light rail you built for a certain city im not sure if it was Abuja. You totally failed to produce evidence that it works. All you could produce were launch photos. The window is still open. There is no shred of evidence that a significant number of Nigerians use it. Dont take us for a ride. 2 Likes |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 8:20pm On May 19, 2019 |
theenchanter: Learning is a slow painful process but at least its happening. Back in the day some of your keyboard warrior bros and sis fought to death to deny that any slums exist in Abuja. At least now you have accepted there are slums in Abuja though you claim they are not properly inside. Eventually you will accept the whole truth 3 Likes |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 8:50pm On May 19, 2019 |
vaxx1:This is pathetic, Accra Vulcanizer. I can see you can never learn.Your failure is cast in stone. 2 Likes |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by PetroDollax: 8:53pm On May 19, 2019 |
Don't get too excited, gullible boy. are these one roads or rivers? www.nairaland.com/attachments/1504556_1492484_Ibolandaba_jpg98d4eed8c030608c7f6856cf8cdb435d_jpgb0b9c7231bbd168695871e71a29e78d5 www.nairaland.com/attachments/866142_aba_jpg4110290948b017d7d41c1288cc90be77 [img]www.nairaland.com/attachments/866144_aba3_jpg04eaf04d270bde469f375210ae3f6c8b [/img] [quote author=obaaderemdone,desperate boy. Let me show you Apapa Wharf road as at now. [/quote] www.nairaland.com/attachments/866142_aba_jpg4110290948b017d7d41c1288cc90be77 www.nairaland.com/attachments/866144_aba3_jpg04eaf04d270bde469f375210ae3f6c8b 1 Like
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 8:54pm On May 19, 2019 |
How Magufuli brought Tanzania to its knees. https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2019/05/tanzania-president-upended-strong-east-africa-democracy/589339/ DAR ES SALAAM—John Magufuli began shaking things up on his first full day in office. On November 6, 2015, the newly elected president walked unannounced into Tanzania’s Ministry of Finance, peering into empty offices and interrogating frightened staff—letting it be known that a government long characterized by laxity was in for a major change. He later canceled independence day celebrations and redirected the funding to fight cholera, purged more than 10,000 so-called ghost workers from the public-sector payroll, and initiated a crackdown on corruption and underperformance that saw numerous senior officials sacked, some following scoldings on live television. Africa took notice: Twitter users across the continent adopted the hashtag #WhatWouldMagufuliDo to speculate how he might clean up their own governments. Ten months into his first term, polling by Twaweza, a regional civil-society group, found that 96 percent of Tanzanians approved of his performance. In a country that has long been one of the continent’s most stable democracies, where freedom of expression has historically been protected, that near-unanimous level of approval was astounding. Since then, a more troubling pattern has set in: In its three and a half years in power, Magufuli’s government has jailed rival politicians, pop stars, and journalists; prevented teenage mothers from returning to school; and threatened mass arrests of LGBTQ Tanzanians. New regulations severely restrict social-media critics and criminalize the publication of data not endorsed by the government. Tundu Lissu, an outspoken opposition member of Parliament, barely survived an attempted assassination in 2017, and last October, Mohammed Dewji, Tanzania’s only billionaire, was kidnapped for 10 days. Mdude Nyagali, a young opposition activist, was abducted by gunmen on May 4; he was discovered last week dumped in a bush and showing signs of torture. Critics say that none of these acts have been thoroughly investigated by the authorities. Now Tanzania’s 60 million people are beginning to realize that the honeymoon period is over, and that their country is more and more being governed by repression. “There’s been a big shift to a much more constricted, constrained environment,” Aidan Eyakuze, Twaweza’s executive director, told me. “People are scared to say what they used to be able to say.” Eyakuze’s own passport was seized by the authorities after his organization reported last July that support for the president had plummeted to 55 percent. In some ways, the 59-year-old Magufuli is hardly an anomaly in a region dominated by strongmen. Though much of sub-Saharan Africa saw sweeping democratic gains after the Cold War, political and civil rights have remained stagnant in West Africa, declined moderately in southern Africa, and fallen precipitously in the East and Central subregions since the mid-2000s, according to the think tank Freedom House. While new leaders in Ethiopia and Angola have made notable recent strides toward openness, democracy in Tanzania’s neighborhood is hardly robust. Leaders of three of its immediate neighbors—Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi—have clung to power beyond their original legal mandates and preside over some of the world’s worst human-rights records. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, former President Joseph Kabila has positioned himself to rule by proxy in retirement. Although Kenya, East Africa’s economic powerhouse, has avoided the “presidents for life” syndrome, its elections are regularly disputed. Tanzania long stood out as an exception. A single party, known today as Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), has ruled the country since Tanzania’s 1964 creation as a merger between the former British colony of Tanganyika and the British protectorate of Zanzibar. But Tanzania’s leaders have respected term limits, and tolerated a vibrant opposition since the adoption of a multiparty system in 1992. The country has never experienced major civil conflict. Many credit Tanzania’s first president, Julius Nyerere, with forging a strong sense of national identity, which minimized the ethnic divisions that continue to plague many countries in the region. Yet Nyerere’s economic policies, including a failed scheme that resettled millions of people into planned villages, also left a legacy of underdevelopment. Even as economic growth accelerated over the past decade, Tanzania remained notorious for its slow pace of life and a government often paralyzed by waste and dysfunction. Hassan Abbas, the chief government spokesman, says superfluous trips and unnecessary workshops—frequently at beachside resorts—were rife. Restrictions on the export of grain and a bizarre plan to cut out middlemen from the cashew industry have rankled farmers. Businesspeople say the crackdown on corruption has had the unintended consequence of making it harder to do deals, and rising policy uncertainty has compelled banks to withhold lending. Acts of resource nationalism—such as the levying of an extraordinary $190 billion tax bill on London-based Acacia Mining, initially met with praise at home—are making foreign investors wary. Last month, the Tanzanian government blocked publication of an IMF report that warned of “unpredictable and interventionist policies” it deems likely to significantly hinder economic growth. The suppression of civil liberties has caused some development partners to withhold funding, while a drive to collect taxes, including from petty traders who have long operated outside the formal economic system, has further squeezed the poor. Richard Fabian, who sells kingfish, barracuda, and red snapper along the bustling Dar es Salaam waterfront, says the economic situation now is the worst he’s experienced in his 15 years on the job. Sales have been so poor that his wife and children have returned to their home village because he had to downsize his rental from a family house to a single room. Fabian, like 58 percent of the electorate, voted for Magufuli in 2015, and despite his predicament says he appreciates his cleaning up of government and may support him for reelection next year—particularly if the economy begins to rebound. He may not have a choice: Newly passed legislation gives a state-appointed registrar sweeping powers over internal political-party matters, which opposition leaders say puts the country on a path toward becoming a de facto one-party state. Hashim Rungwe, an attorney and the chairman of the Chaumma Party who finished fifth in the 2015 presidential election and is considering running again, says the prospect of a free and fair vote next year is highly dubious. And democratic space, he fears, will only continue to decline thereafter. “We are going backwards,” the 70-year-old says from his Dar es Salaam office. “Only one person is giving orders. And when he orders, you comply.” 2 Likes
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 9:00pm On May 19, 2019 |
Tanzania always unashamedly following Kenya's footsteps 2 Likes
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by obaaderemi: 9:05pm On May 19, 2019 |
This single deal added about $4bn to Nigeria Stock Exchange's market capitalization in a single fell swoop. They resisted being a public company in Nigeria for years but could not hold out any longer.
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Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 9:12pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi: Your currency can shock someone. Trillion is what we're used to as govt budgets Had to check what that is in Kenya shs. Kudos for the fight against South African hegemony in your economy Its slowly bearing fruits |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by vaxx1: 9:18pm On May 19, 2019 |
obaaderemi:Mr analphabetic slowpoke, Your dad deserve that remark. Police the sentences again. Your dad failure is exactly the same with you. Like father like son |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by theenchanter: 9:26pm On May 19, 2019 |
TayserMahri:Dude, there's no slum in abuja... those slums are situated at d outskirt of abuja, before passing through d city gate. 1 Like |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 9:36pm On May 19, 2019 |
theenchanter: So Abuja has only one entrance or what dude. Anyway, not in the mood for these cyclic arguments these days. I dont need to start researching the slum locations to prove the point. You are in the final phase of denial Eventually you will accept the slums are in Ab freaking Buja. 2 Likes |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by theenchanter: 9:54pm On May 19, 2019 |
TayserMahri:aargh, i already got tired of cyclic arguments. I'm not really bothered about proving a point or not, it's all about passing my own point n leaving d rest to d opinion of others. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by samorobo: 10:29pm On May 19, 2019 |
Ghanaisdoomd: Lol I feel you. You are a troublemaker |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by Nobody: 10:32pm On May 19, 2019 |
theenchanter: Now you sound like the dude you were saying you are 1 Like |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by samorobo: 10:42pm On May 19, 2019 |
Just30: Prickle yourself so you can wake up from that dream. |
Re: Kenya Is Ahead of Nigeria In All Aspect (Facts Don't Lie) by samorobo: 11:02pm On May 19, 2019 |
68816419: You are so fvcking correct. Buhari is really investing in strategic infastructures that can span an intimidating growth not just in africa but the whole world at large. Study the pattern. Rails, industrial zones, airports,deepseaport ports, dry inland ports, city projects . All these started with these administration. Did you know he kick off the following projects early these year Funtua cotton cluster Lekki model industrial city ($4bn) Eyimba economic city. |
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