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Taguafuo's Posts

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BusinessRe: Nigeria Misses Digital Switch-over Deadline Again As Scandal Rocks NBC by taguafuo: 9:05am On Jun 21, 2017
The amount of looting that is taking place in the zoo is unbelievable. other countries, companies pay government to deploy their digital network, but in Nigeria government looters pay themselves and still the service is not provided.

Somebody get me out of this zoo please
PoliticsRe: Igbo Is Playing With Conscience Of Nigerian...it Will Only Lead To War! by taguafuo: 7:48pm On Jun 15, 2017
oladeebo:
It's certain that Igbo didn't have interest in quitting Nigeria for Biafra secession, They only want Nigeria dead!
Nothing can settle Igbo down now, they've made up their mind to kill Nigeria!
Igbo is lobbying with every frustrated elites, looter politicians and political jobbers!
It can never work like that!
No country is never and can never be balkanize like that it will lead to war!
if you ready to go, you go, incite yoruba, incite Niger delta etc, to go long with you will lead into war and it will cost Igbo dearly!
Igbo must be ready to go,pack jejely and go!
If other feel going after you, right, if they they don't wish, they can stay together!
Many Nation had kick against Biafra but Igbo still running after them and forcing them to come along!
Igbo wants freedom but also impose on other Nigeria what it's detest!
If at all Igbo is set free today and there is referendum, it must be free and fair, and the biafra/igbo will not be allow to impose biafra on the igbo/Nigeria before Nigeria and international community can accept such pool!
Also, There 're many delicate issues need to be resolve between Nigeria and Biafra that if care is not taken it will be resulted in war even after referendum!
Igbo mustn't jump into the trap of Nigeria, it will be deadly
Before harm is to be warn!
oladeebo from Umahia
SEE SMALL CHILDREN OF NOWADAYS. SMHHHHH
PoliticsRe: I Am An Expert In Development Economics. AsK Me About Biafra by taguafuo: 7:32pm On Jun 15, 2017
Fantastic discussion this
SportsRe: Pep Guardiola Joins Call For Referendum by taguafuo(op): 11:11pm On Jun 13, 2017
Super1Star:
Is Spain not the country where the Biafrau.dsters opened their 1st Beer Parlour that thay are using to deceive the gullible ones among them as their 1st Embassy.

grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin



iPods and Biafrau.d agitators or blackmailers, your journey remains 250years in the minimum. grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin
According to illiterates, Guardiola has committed treason.
SportsRe: Pep Guardiola Joins Call For Referendum by taguafuo(op): 11:00pm On Jun 13, 2017
Zoo people, Pep Guardiola is an IPOB youth.
SportsRe: Pep Guardiola Joins Call For Referendum by taguafuo(op): 10:54pm On Jun 13, 2017
Zoo police. Go and shoot Pep, he wants to secede. Illiteracy go kill una, zoo people
SportsRe: Pep Guardiola Joins Call For Referendum by taguafuo(op): 10:52pm On Jun 13, 2017
Even Pep Guardiola want referendum
SportsPep Guardiola Joins Call For Referendum by taguafuo(op): 10:30pm On Jun 13, 2017
Pep Guardiola joins call for referendum on Catalan independence


Pep Guardiola may have played to bigger crowds but none quite like the one he addressed in Barcelona on Sunday when he presented the case for a referendum on Catalan independence.

Speaking on the steps of Montjuïc before an estimated 40,000 of his fellow citizens, and flanked by an enormous banner with the slogan “Love Democracy”, the former Barcelona and current Manchester City manager read out a brief manifesto in Catalan, Spanish and English.

“We have tried on 18 occasions to reach an agreement on a referendum and the answer has always been no,” he told the crowd.

“We have no other option but to vote. We call on the international community to support us and on democrats the world over to help us to defend the rights that are threatened in Catalonia, such as the right of freedom of expression and the right to vote.”

On Friday, the Catalan government announced that a referendum on independence from Spain would be held on 1 October. The defiant gesture met with a familiar response from Madrid: not only would such a vote be illegal, it would not be allowed to go ahead.

“They can announce a referendum as many times as they want … but the referendum is not going to take place,” said Spain’s deputy prime minister, Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría. Another minister dismissed it as “a new step in a strategy that’s leading nowhere”.


Carme Forcadell, the leader of the Catalan parliament, received a huge ovation at the Barcelona rally when she told the flag-waving crowd “there is no Plan B, the only way forward is a referendum”.

Catalonia held an unofficial referendum in November 2014 in which 80% voted for independence, but barely a third of eligible voters turned out.

“I think the turnout will be higher than in 2014 because a lot of people want to have their say,” said Jesús Espinosa, waiting in the 30-degree heat for Guardiola to speak. “We’ve been striving for this for 300 years and we’re not going to stop now.”

“What I want is for us to have the opportunity to vote and to become an independent Catalan republic and to do it legally and peacefully. Madrid will respond as it’s always done because Catalonia is a source of income and they’ll fight with all they have to keep it.”

After the mass rallies in recent years that have attracted more than a million people, Sunday’s turnout of only tens of thousands, according to the Catalan government, might be viewed as disappointing. According to a poll at the end of March, support for independence is falling, with 48.5% of Catalans opposed to seceding from Spain, while 44.3% supported breaking away.

Raül Romeva, the Catalan foreign affairs minister, told the Guardian the regional government had a duty to put independence to a popular vote. “We have tried to reach a consensual agreement with Madrid but their response has always been no,” he said.

“At the end of the day – given there’s not even been the will to sit down at the table to discuss the question – the Catalan government had a democratic obligation and the mandate to put this to the people of Catalonia so that they can express themselves freely.”

Although Spain’s constitutional court ruled that a previous, non-binding referendum held in November 2014 was illegal, Romeva insisted there was nothing in the Spanish constitution to stop the new vote going ahead.


Madrid has hinted that it could seek to thwart the vote by invoking article 155 of the constitution. In theory, the drastic step would allow it to suspend regional autonomy, order the closure of schools in the region to stop them being used as polling stations and even take control of the Catalan police.

Asked if the Catalan government was planning for such a scenario, Romeva said: “We don’t know how the government is going to stop something that is legal, legitimate and democratic … When we know what we need to respond to, we will.”

Whatever happened, he added, the Catalan government remained committed to a referendum regardless of its outcome.

“We know that people want to be asked the question,” he said. “And if the result of the referendum is no, we’ll respect that result, full stop. And if it’s yes, that result will have to be respected. I don’t know what the result will be – no one does.''


Source
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/11/pep-guardiola-referendum-catalan-independence-barcelona-rally

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