SFSNIPER's Posts
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Dats the price!!! |
Ogbeche77:Have you actually confirmed what really happened? Don't read a one-side story on NL and start drawing up conclusion. I know someone like you could have done worse. Take the case study I put up there, did I punish the CMs insulting dat soldier? Did I report them? Mr Man, all soldiers are not the same. I just laughed at your 'sense' all through your post. |
MrScript:1). Between a soldier and CM who is doing voluntary service to the nation? 2). Don't just assume every soldier has "just" an SSCE. I have a Bsc but I used my SSCE to join the Army and hope to go for DSS after sometime. Dats just an example, I have many more colleagues who all have a Bsc or Msc added. 3). NO SOLDIER just starts beating up a CM. Last year I was in Sokoto camp and on a fateful day at the mammy Mkt, I overheard some female CMS insulting a soldier just because he wakes them "too early". They said stuff like "him think say to get degree na beans"? Meanwhile, the soldier in question has an Msc. Now, they had forgotten that we take instructions from the camp CMDT. I called them and cautioned them, and I also called the soldier to come around and we spoke about his papers. He didn't know why I brought up that topic but the CMS got my point. 4). If you are not sent to Maiduguri, you can't just go. And 90% of us in the North have tasted it so it is not new. I've even lost very close mates, some died before my eyes. And I can tell you that if you know what we see down there you'll NEVER loosely tell your relative to go there the way you say it to other soldiers. 5). The way you relate with and treat a soldier determines how he will treat you. Make enquiries about this incident well and you may find out the CMS resisted a lighter punishment and probably said some insultive words. I bet you! I'll always stand up in defense of my colleagues anywhere, anytime. Just like I'll do for innocent civilians. Good evening. |
That's me in 2011 2014 & 2014 again. More to come! |
The father to the husband, Mr. Tersen
was found dead on his way to Gboko
after seeing his inlaws for burial
arrangements from Wannune, Tarka
LGA.
It will be horrible to see 3 people buried
at once, Timothy, Erdoo and Tersen. May
your gentle souls rest in peace, Amen! |
Arafat's bodyguard, that tall guy in suit killed Abacha and not Brazilian girls or an Apple. The guy shook Abacha and pierced him slightly with a poisoned ring. Mustapha has already given a detailed info on what really happened. |
What a father! This man's temper can actually boil yam. |
I just asked my fiancee and she said at most 15, na strong mind I use hold body back. But it won't stop me from marrying her. |
tit:Your foolishness is #EPIC. What and where is the sense in what you just said? |
See frosh bobo!!! |
emekauzor:Create ur own thread Mr man |
The QPR defender, 36, released a statement saying his "wonderful wife and soul mate" Rebecca Ellison had "passed away peacefully" at a London hospital. Ms Ellison, who married Ferdinand in 2009, had breast cancer. She leaves behind three children, Lorenz, nine, Tate, six, and four-year- old Tia. In a statement, Ferdinand said she died on Friday night. "Rebecca, my wonderful wife, passed away peacefully after a short battle with cancer at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London," the 36-year-old said on QPR's website. "She was a fantastic loving mother to our three beautiful children. She will be missed as a wife, sister, aunt, daughter and granddaughter. She will live on in our memory, as a guide and inspiration. "Myself, my parents Janice and Julian, along with Rebecca's parents Lesley and Stephen, would like to thank our families, friends and my club colleagues who have rallied around in these desperate days, weeks and months." Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-32563022 |
RIP |
Real talk! |
Hard luck! But your kinsmen are doing worse. |
F.U.U.U.U.C.C.C.K.K the Police, they're chickens. R.I.P poor fellow! |
(CNN)— Most kids want to go out and play when they finish their homework early. But Zuriel Oduwole isn't "most kids." When she gets ahead of her work, she packs her camera and microphones, jumps on a plane and interviews presidents instead. Born in California to a Nigerian father and a Mauritian mother, Oduwole is often described as "the world's youngest filmmaker." Aged 12, she already has four documentaries under her belt -- all of which focus on African issues. Early beginnings It all started three years ago when Oduwole decided to enter a school documentary- making competition with a film about the Ghana revolution. Just who has Zuriel Oduwole interviewed? Jerry John Rawlings (Ghana) John Kufour (Ghana) Joyce Banda (Malawi) Jakaya Kikwete (Tanzania) Rajkeswur Purryag (Mauritius) Uhuru Kenyatta (Kenya) Goodluck Johnathan (Nigeria) Salva Kirr Mayardit (South Sudan) Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (Liberia) Jorge Fonseco (Cape Verde) Portia Simpson Miller (Jamaica) Thomas Thabane (Lesotho) Ralph Gonsalves (St Vincent & Grenadines) Denzil Douglas (St Kitts & Nevis) (CNN)— Most kids want to go out and play when they finish their homework early. But Zuriel Oduwole isn't "most kids." When she gets ahead of her work, she packs her camera and microphones, jumps on a plane and interviews presidents instead. Born in California to a Nigerian father and a Mauritian mother, Oduwole is often described as "the world's youngest filmmaker." Aged 12, she already has four documentaries under her belt -- all of which focus on African issues. Early beginnings It all started three years ago when Oduwole decided to enter a school documentary- making competition with a film about the Ghana revolution. After this first foray into filmmaking, Oduwole was bitten by the director's bug and quickly wanted to make more movies. She turned to the web to find the tools she needed and got involved in the entire filmmaking process. "As I edit, produce, set up and write the scripts for my documentaries, I have to learn a lot of things," says Oduwole, who is self-taught and uses online editing and voice software. Her second outing, "Educating and Healing Africa Out of Poverty," looked at the creation of the African Union in 1963. She followed it up in 2014 with her movie "Technology in Educational Development." But it was her most recent project that catapulted her to international recognition. Released late last year, "A Promising Africa" ( watch trailer below) is the first in an ongoing series which will profile five African nations, starting with her father's homeland of Nigeria. "I've interviewed 14 heads of state and a few of those include the President of Tanzania, Liberia, Kenya, South Sudan, Nigeria and Cape Verde, to name a few," says Oduwole. "I've also been able to interview business leaders like my friend Mr Aliko Dangote." Changing the narrative To date, "A Promising Africa" has received a limited-release on the big screen in five countries -- Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, UK and Japan. The young trailblazer, who was named by Business Insider as one of world's 100 most powerful individuals last year, delightedly recalls seeing her film on the big screen and walking the red carpet in Lagos. "I'm hoping that when people see these documentaries they will see Africa is full of positive things -- not just the things that are on the news like war, famine, disease," she says. "I want to show them there is a lot more to Africa than what we see on the news -- there's dancing, music, great culture and more." 'Dream Up, Speak Up, Stand Up' Although she's just 12, Oduwole, who is home- schooled through an online Californian system, is already a 9th grader -- two years ahead of the rest of the kids her age. Her mother, Patricia, has a full-time job as a computer engineer, whilst her father, Ademola, has taken time off his work in the tourism sector to help organize a lot of what Zuriel and her three other siblings are doing. "There really is a lot happening in our household but somehow we make it work," says Patricia Oduwole. In addition to her documentary work, Oduwole has also become something of an education advocate. She travels to different African countries and the diaspora on a regular basis to talk to students about the importance of education. So far, through her side project "Dream Up, Speak Up, Stand Up" she says she's had the opportunity to talk to 21,000 children in nine countries. "Girl's education is important because on the African continent, where there are not as many resources, the boys are the first [to get an education]," says Oduwole. "The boys go to school and get an education while the girls stay at home. And those girls aren't education and fewer option in life when they get older". Source:: http://edition.cnn.com/2015/04/30/africa/zuriel-oduwole-filmmaker/index.html |
Gentlemen you are welcome. NO GOING BACK! And remember, your morale must ALWAYS be high. |
Money is actually a good thing! |
Welcome to the land of akpu, eba and poundo. The land of abundance. |
Noloss:Sorry Ma'am, I said VOLUNTEERS. |
I need just ten volunteers so we would do our own group trekking from Lagos To Abuja. We would aim to ascertain the possibility of making it within 18days like Hamisu did, and put to rest or bring to light the facts or the lies. Email: lordbaruka@gmail.com Whatsapp: 08080330000 |
RotrEmmanuel:You sound really pained!!! Is that your best? Please try something harder. Even if I was born by a mad woman, I'd still be proud of her as my mum. NO APOLOGIES ON THAT. Now, for the second time, suck a fat man's dick. |
RotrEmmanuel:Well, I borrowed it and applied it to human behavior. Now suck a fat man's dick. |
chuna1985:There's an equal and opposite reaction to every action. - Isaac Newton |
politricks:Mr Terminator we charged through Sambisa in February and March and nobody lives there again. Enjoy ur sleep |
politricks:Die there. |
Gentlemen give it a try. |
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