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SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:32am On Feb 12, 2024
tctrills:
Yes we had the best striker when you judge by club performance but Nigeria scored less than 1.2 goals a match.
Our best department was our defence
Our midfield was not bad but like our attack, it wasn't creative.
But then to be honest, our team was an average team.
With the exception of our striker, non of our boys would start in a top 10 premier league team.
So let's give it to them. They achieved beyond their ability.
You're right. Our best asset was our defence.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:27am On Feb 12, 2024
Iamgrey5:
iwobi is not a proper central midfielder and while Oyenka is an excellent player, he is not excellent In transition( passing the ball at pace to the front)..

Iwobi is only the one in the midfield with an excellent passing ability in the midfield but he doesn't have the physical strength or pace.
In this kind of game, we needed a player like Mikel Obi and Onasi that would tackle opponents, break their rhythm and spread the ball across. If Iwobi and Oyenka are only good in one department, then going forward, we have to find a replacement for them. We need a complete player in the midfield. A decent midfielder should be able to win balls, dribble, break attacks, and give excellent passes.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:21am On Feb 12, 2024
tctrills:
Attack was nonexistent. Defense was compromised severally.
I disagree. We have one of the best attackers in the tournament. Our problem is the midfield. The attackline wasn't getting adequate supply of balls as it should. Also, the continuous pressure on our defence is an indication of an extremely weak midfield that can't break opponent's attacks.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:15am On Feb 12, 2024
Iamgrey5:
We played too deep and our wingers were totally useless.

Everytime we won the ball back our wingers were crowded out by two ivorian defenders right in our own half of the field.


We needed to put pressure on the Ivorian defense to push them back but instead we kept going deep.


Adringa pace was used to stretch our defense as South Africa used percy Tau to do the same in the last match.
Our midfield was none existence tonight. We weren't tackling the Ivorians neither were we winning balls. So, no adequate supply of balls to the attackers. Everything weren't just right from the start of the game.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:11am On Feb 12, 2024
OyinO:
Too much blood in the hands. You're preparing to celebrate and jubilate when there's too much blood upon the land? That's how we celebrate and dance and share monies while countless persons are in the hostage of criminals. Whole passengers of commercial buses are taken captive in broad daylight. The blood cries out for vengeance.
We are too superstitious as a people. Germans killed millions of Jews during the holocaust, yet they are still prosperous as a people.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ivory Coast AFCON 2023 Finals (1 - 2) On 11th February 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 11:58pm On Feb 11, 2024
Poor officiating aside, our midfield was awful. Iwobi wasn't in the game at all. When a defence was on a constant attack like we experienced tonight, goals are inevitable.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs.Cameroon: AFCON Round Of 16. (2 - 0) On 27th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 12:15am On Jan 28, 2024
We should be able to handle Angola in the quarter final.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs.Cameroon: AFCON Round Of 16. (2 - 0) On 27th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 10:29pm On Jan 27, 2024
Confirmedzombie:
Cameron will still won this march. Someone should told Nigerians that our players to eat Garri but xamovita

We must won this march

Nigerians are illitracys
grin Wahala de o
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Guinea-Bissau: AFCON 2023 - (1 - 0) On 22nd January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 8:39pm On Jan 22, 2024
dreyboard:
I just imagined this Nigeria playing against Senegal grin, we go too chop beating
As bad as we look, beating us won't be that easy.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Guinea-Bissau: AFCON 2023 - (1 - 0) On 22nd January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 8:14pm On Jan 22, 2024
It's normal to sometimes have bad days as a striker, but when the best player on the continent consistently squanders goal-scoring opportunities in a continental competition, there's cause for concern.
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 8:06pm On Jan 18, 2024
Nazgul:
Ajayi's performance today was superb
He deserves the Man of the Match Award.
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 8:04pm On Jan 18, 2024
zagorakis:
Patriotism on empty stomach, I need money abeg.
grin
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 7:26pm On Jan 18, 2024
zagorakis:
I bet Goal: Goal, ivory Coast need to score too
Where is your patriotism?
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 7:16pm On Jan 18, 2024
Goal!
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 7:15pm On Jan 18, 2024
Penalty awarded!
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 7:13pm On Jan 18, 2024
obaidan:
I see your frustration but definitely that is not a good decision, the coach needs to see how we can stamp our authority in the middle of the park, the boys are doing well in the present circumstance because Ivory coast seem to have very strong good players in the middle of the park, if we can somehow turn around the dominance in the middle in our favor, we stand a good chance of beating them
Do we have a coach? This one doesn't know what he is doing o
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 6:57pm On Jan 18, 2024
JoshTim:
Nigeria doesn't look like a team that will win. No ball sense. This is what you get when all these players turn themselves to celebrity dey bleep all these asawo.
Do we even have a team? These boys aren't really playing as a compact unit.
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 6:43pm On Jan 18, 2024
Victor Osimeh has not lived up to expectations in this tournament so far, he missed many chances during our last match and he has done the same today too.
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 6:38pm On Jan 18, 2024
Twoclans:
Maybe the coach should not have started with osimhen.The defenders are all over him.

He should have been in the bench and study the game then come in.
What about the one-on-one chance he squandered?
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 6:35pm On Jan 18, 2024
Pillar12:
Osinmeh just dey play rubbish
Maybe because he feels he is untouchable.
SportsRe: Ivory Coast. Vs Nigeria: AFCON 2023: 0 - 1 On 18th January 2024 by Teejay2033(m): 6:34pm On Jan 18, 2024
So far, Osimhen is really messing up in this match.
PoliticsRe: Another Soldier Lambast Gov Sanwo - Olu For Arresting His Colleague (Pic,Video) by Teejay2033(m): 9:45pm On Jan 07, 2024
Hurbashola:
ANOTHER SOLDIER REACT TO VIRAL VIDEO OF GOV SANWO - OLU ARRESTING HIS COLLEAGUE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YW99UaCaSPg

A soldier has slammed the Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, for ordering the arrest of his colleague alongside three other motorcyclists for driving against traffic on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway.
The yet-to-be-identified soldier, who appeared to be defending his colleague in a viral video on Thursday, faulted Sanwo-Olu for calling a soldier ‘useless’ in the presence of ‘bastard civilians’.

On Tuesday, ordered the arrest of a soldier and three other motorcyclists for driving against traffic on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway.
In a viral video, Sanwo-Olu was seen ordering his men to put one of the motorcyclists who claimed to be a soldier into the vehicle, stating that he was going to lock him up.

Reacting to the arrest, the soldier who believed that his colleague had done nothing to have deserved an arrest, said the state governor had no right to arrest a soldier, especially in front of his barracks.
He claimed that soldiers are not under the control of any state governor but their senior officers.
The police can not arrest a soldier for infractions committed within the scope of their military service, but off-duty offenses fall under civilian law. Soldiers are subject to the same arrest procedures as any citizen for non-military crimes. Also, civilians can arrest. This is called citizen arrest.
CultureThe Awori Are The Founders Of Lagos by Teejay2033(op): 2:47am On Dec 27, 2023
Monday Lines

Oba of Benin, ancestors and Lagos

By Lasisi Olagunju

(Published in the Nigerian Tribune on Monday, 4 December, 2023)

“Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped." Imagine this George Orwel dystopian quote in his '1984' applying directly to where you come from. That is why I sympathise with both sides in the controversy that has followed Oba of Benin's claim of Lagos as his ancestors' creation. Between the two sides, who is telling the truth? I have a friend who thinks that more serious existential issues should provoke Nigerians' outcries and not this antique matter of who founded where. But I told that person to read John Hope Franklin's 1944 piece 'History- Weapon of War and Peace', and the author's thesis that one of the intangible weapons of war is history.

Did Plato not say "those who tell the stories rule society"? An oba who rarely goes out of his domain goes out. And while out, he says publicly that "I do not want to say this" because of the certain controversy that will follow, but he proceeds immediately to say that very thing. He has not made a mistake; he had his reason for saying what he said where he said it. So, do not blame the people doing a pushback against the king's claim; blame not the original owners of Lagos for replying the oba. Remember that slogan of the Party in Orwel’s 1984: ‘Who controls the past controls the future...’

The Oba of Benin, Ewuare II, said during his recent visit to Lagos that his ancestors founded Lagos. He spoke at the Lagos State House, Marina, where he was received by the state governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu. Addressing the audience, the monarch said, “I don't want to say something that will now drag me into the controversy of Benin and Lagos. But I cannot help but say that it is in history books that Benin founded Lagos. But when some people hear it now, they (will) go haywire that ‘what is the Oba saying there again?’ But it is true. Go and check the records. Maybe not all of Lagos as we know it now, but certain areas in Lagos – maybe, the nucleus of Lagos was founded by my ancestors. The Oba of Lagos will say so. Everyone knows it, (that) the source of Lagos is Benin whether the Ooni of Ife likes it or not.”

The good thing about Yoruba people is that their history is long documented. There is hardly a town without at least a book or pamphlet containing its ancient and modern history. My very small community, Eripa, in Osun State has a compendium that contains the family tree of every lineage in every compound in the community. Our next-door neighbour, Otan Ayegbaju, has a similar text; the next town on that line, Ila Orangun (where I had my primary and secondary school education), has a number of books on its history, one of them 'The Orangun Dynasty,' written by the town's very first university graduate, Prince Isaac Adebayo, and published in 1996, qualifies as a history book on the Igbomina-Yoruba people worldwide. Lillian Trager's Ijesa-focused 'Yoruba Hometowns' (2001) with Foreword written by Justice Kayode Eso, and Sarah S. Berry's various works, including 'Fathers Work for Their Sons' (1985) tell the deep attachment the Yoruba have for their hometowns even when they no longer live there or "may never have lived there." The Yoruba do not think any amount is too heavy to contribute and spend in defence of their homeland and its history. In wartime, they buy guns and send them home; in peacetime, they write and publish books on their home.

Emeritus Professor of the History of Africa at the University of Stirling, United Kingdom, Robin Law, in his 'Early Yoruba Historiography' (published in 'History in Africa, 1976, Vol. 3, page 69-89), wrote that "the Yoruba have been exceptionally prolific among West African peoples in the production of historical literature." Law said it was "exceedingly difficult to trace (all) the works of Yoruba local historians". But he tried and got quite a number: There was Iwe Itan Eko by John B. Ogunjinmi Losi (1913) with its English translation 'History of Lagos' (1914). There were Iwe Itan Abeokuta (1917) and its translation, History of Abeokuta (1923). There was another 'History of Abeokuta' (1916) by Emmanuel Olympus O. Moore (better known as Ajayi Kolawole Ajisafe). The Yoruba also had Iwe Itan Ibadan (1912) by Isaac Babalola Akinyele who later became Olubadan. There were Iwe Itan Ajase (Porto Novo) by Akindele Akinsowon (1914); Iwe Itan Oyo Ile ati Oyo Isisiyi abi Ago d'Oyo by M. C. Adeyemi (1916); History of Ondo by the Rev. J.A. Leigh (1917) and A History of Ketu (in Benin Republic) by Abbe Thomas Moulro (1926). There were also 'Iwe Itan Ijesa-Obokun' by J.D.E. Abiola, J.A. Babafemi and S.O.S. Ataiyero (1932); Iwe Itan Ogbomoso by N.D. Oyerinde (1934); Iwe Ikekuru ti Itan Ijebu by M.D. Okubote (1937); Iwe Itan Saki by Samuel Ojo Bada (1937) and Iwe Itan Ondo by Samuel Ojo Bada (1940). There were several others.

The Yoruba's pocket of well documented history is deep. Lagos has several such books. One of them is 'Iwe Itan Eko' and its translation, 'History of Lagos', by John Losi. There are more recent ones that include 'A History of Lagos, Nigeria: The Shaping of an African City' by Takiu Folami, published in 1982 and described as "most authoritative" in its Foreword by the late Oba of Lagos, Adeyinka Oyekan. A knowledge-driven people with this kind of background will always be difficult to defeat in a battle of records. So, when the Oba of Benin, Ewuare II, was shown in Lagos some days ago flashing history and declaring that his ancestors founded Lagos and that his kingdom was the source and the fountain head of Lagos, it was not a surprise to see the Yoruba elite, especially the Awori-Yoruba, up and asking which 'history' the Benin monarch was talking about. The Yoruba say they have enough documentary evidence to prove that the claim from Benin palace was not based on facts of history.

Lagos started from Isheri and "the first man that built Isheri and settled there...was a hunter, named Ogunfunminire, meaning ‘the god of iron has given me success.’ He was of the royal family of Ile-Ife...” John B. Losi, school headmaster and pioneer Lagos historian wrote the above in his book, Iwe Itan Eko published in 1913. It was twenty years after that book was published that the first book on Benin history, Jacob Egharevba's 'Ekhere vb Itan Edo' (Short History of Benin) was published in 1933.

The fact of the Benin-Lagos history is that the Awori inhabited a land they called Oko under their leader, Olófin. Their Oko includes today's Iddo and the general Lagos Island area. In 1603, the more powerful kingdom of Benin came on an armada of war boats, overran them, turned their Oko to a war camp (Eko), gave them a king and started collecting tributes from them. War historians will describe what happened as seizure by conquest. That is a relationship that does not align with Oba of Benin's claim of founding Lagos and of Benin being its source. You don't wage a war against a non-existent people. The fact of Lagos's existence provoked the attack and subjugation from Benin forces. And, did you notice that the Oba of Benin said the Oba of Lagos would say exactly what he said about Benin being the founder and source of Lagos? He was right about the Oba of Lagos. The palace in Lagos, today, sees itself as an extension of the Benin palace. It won't remember that there had been points in the past when the Lagos underling was weaned of his slavery. Robert Smith in his 'The Lagos Consulate, 1851–1861' published in 1978 cites an instance in 1860 when the Oba of Benin asked Oba Dosumu to allow exiled ex-King Kosoko return to Lagos. Oba Dosunmu turned down the request from the Benin palace declaring that things were "not as in former times when Lagos was under the King of Benin to whom annually a tribute was paid".

Could the source of the current controversy be the Benin oba's choice of words? He said his ancestors 'founded' Lagos. He used that word 'founded' twice, which means it wasn't a slip. 'Founded' is the past tense and past participle of 'found' which means "establish or originate" (Oxford English Dictionary); "to bring something into existence" (Cambridge English Dictionary). So, how could the ancestors of the Oba of Benin have been the ones who brought into existence a settlement that they waged war against in 1603 but which received the Portuguese explorer, Rui de Sequeira, in 1472? The Oba also said "the source of Lagos is Benin". 'Source', in this context, means the place where something (e.g. a river or stream) starts (Oxford English Dictionary). If he had said his ancestors took Lagos by conquest and imposed a dynasty of kings on it, he would have been right. But he chose the more solid markers of original possession: "found" and "source". With profound respect, I say the Oba's claims are historically not correct. I read G.A. Akinola's 'The Origin of the Eweka Dynasty of Benin: A Study in the Use and Abuse of Oral Traditions (1976)'. In April, 1973, the researcher was in the palace of the Oba of Benin, Akenzua II, on an interview appointment but the Oba changed his mind when he arrived. The Oba refused to speak with the man while he "wondered why a Yoruba should be interested in Benin history." The researcher reported that his session with the king ended "with the Oba and his courtiers reminiscing about how Eko (that is Lagos) in fact belongs to Benin by right of conquest long ago." I see a divergence here between the position of the current Oba of Benin and that of his ancestor, Akenzua II. The ancestor claimed Lagos as a war booty; the incumbent claims Lagos as a creation of his ancestors.

I have read the seminal 'Benin Imperialism and the Transformation of Idejo Chieftaincy Institution in Lagos, 1603-1850' written by Bashir Animasahun of Lagos State University, and published in the Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria (2016). I have read the author's argument that the conquest of Lagos by the Benin Kingdom led to a change of the Lagos political system from a confederacy to a monarchy in the period 1603 to 1850. I have read his point that the imposition of Benin monarchy in Lagos made the Idejo chiefs who had ruled Lagos between 1500 and 1603 get incorporated into the new monarchy as white cap chiefs but that they retained control over land rights. From the fine lines of his work, I could deduce that Benin could claim a dynasty of Lagos obas, but it has little control (if any) over the land there.

Lagos has had more than its fair share of socio-political changes imposed from outside. None of the outsiders should ever claim to be its creator, although they serially gave it names. The Awori 'Oko' became 'Eko' when it was invaded and conquered by the Benin in about 1603. When the Portuguese came, the toponym was Curamo, then a transition began. According to Liora Bigon (2011), "Curamo, was used in parallel to another Portuguese name, 'Onim', which became more dominant towards the end of the eighteenth century and the early nineteenth. Among the other variations of Onim in contemporary sources, especially Portuguese and French, were Aunis, Ahoni, or Onis. These names, as explained by Law, were probably derived from Awori, the Yoruba sub-group to which the first residents of Oko belonged...The name Lagos itself — from the Portuguese lago or lagõa ('Lake' or 'lagoon') — permanently replaced all the other names only when Portuguese influence started to fade and gave way to the British." (see Liora Bigon's 'The Former Names of Lagos (Nigeria) in Historical Perspective' published in Names, Vol. 59 No. 4, December, 2011, 229–40).

Oba Ewuare II laid his claim to Lagos and added the clause, "whether the Ooni likes it or not". With that broadside, the Oba was claiming more than Lagos. It didn't start today. There is an age-long war of histories between the royalty of Benin and the House of Oduduwa in Ile Ife. Oba Ewuare II's father and predecessor was in the ring with the predecessor of the incumbent Ooni of Ife on more than one occasion. On November 11, 1982, the Oba of Benin was a guest of Oba Okunade Sijuwade Olubuse II. Oba Sijuwade, at that occasion, told the Benin king: "As we have mentioned briefly during our historic visit to your domain not too long ago, we said we were there to pat you on the back for a job well done...Your present visit...we regard as a short home-coming where you will have an opportunity to commune with those deities you left behind... Now, my son and brother, long may you reign." The Oba of Benin replied that address of welcome with "If the Ooni of Ife calls the Oba of Benin his son and the Oba of Benin calls the Ooni of Ife his son, they are both right" (see Edun Akenzua's Ekaladerhan, 2008: Pages Xi -Xii). But you and I know that they cannot both be right. The Benin-Ife story started not with the present Oranmiyan dynasty but with the earlier pre-Benin Ogiso dynasty. Is it true that Obagodo or Ogiso, the man who started Igodomigodo, the pre-Benin entity, came there from Ile Ife? I have read Dmitri M. Bondarenko's 'Ancient Benin: Where did the first monarchs come from?' (2001). I have read 'A reconsideration of the Ife-Benin relationship' by A. F. C. Ryder (1965) published in the Journal of African History. I have read 'The Scholarship of Jacob Egharevba of Benin' by Uyilawa Usuanlele and Toyin Falola published in History in Africa, 1994. I have read some more on Ife and Benin archaeology. But I note, specifically that Jacob Egharevba wrote 'Ekhere Vb 'Itan Edo' (Short History of Benin') and published it after reading the manuscript to Oba Eweka II in 1933 with the crown prince who would later become Akenzua II in attendance. The reading-and-listening exercise made the book the official/palace history of Benin. Now, what does the first edition (even the second edition) of that 'Short History' say about Benin and Ile-Ife and their origins?

Back to Lagos. A story is like a rope; no matter how long, it must have a beginning and an end. I end this piece with some words of knowledge from first class historian, Professor Ayodeji Olukoju, in his 2017 seminal piece entitled 'Which Lagos, Whose (Hi)story?': "We may conclude that Awori-Yoruba communities in Lagos, as we now know them, played host to, and absorbed, a series of newcomers. Among these were military invaders and settlers from Benin of Edo State; fugitives, refugees and adventurers from the hinterland Yoruba kingdoms, ranging from those displaced by nineteenth-century Yoruba inter-state wars and the Ifole in Abeokuta (13 October, 1867); retainers of chiefly families of Nupe origins; returnees and deportees from the Atlantic and West African diaspora; descendants of British colonial-era 'Hausa' constabulary and Royal West African Frontier Force (RWAFF) personnel; and individuals who were absorbed as retainers and guests of notable Lagos ruling families." The takeaway from the foregoing is that Lagos takes not just the waters of the hinterland; it takes (and cares for) the people too – from everywhere.
PoliticsRe: Niger State Revokes Licences Of Liquor Dealers by Teejay2033(m): 1:51am On Dec 27, 2023
TylerDurden:
The Niger State Government has revoked all the licences issued to liquor dealers throughout the state.

The Niger State Liquor Licensing Board, the body charged with the responsibility of regulating the sale and consumption of alcohol, announced this in a statement signed by its chairman, Malam Muhammad Shafii.

The state government had in 2000 introduced the Sharia legal system in the state under which sale and consumption of alcohol and related beverages in restricted areas of major town and cities in the state were prohibited.

Under the law, the sale and consumption of alcohol are restricted to eight kilometres from each of the city centre.

But in a U-turn on Monday, the state government banned the outright sale and consumption of alcohol in any part of the state.

In the statement in Minna, Shafii said liquor vendors caught contravening the order would not only be arrested but prosecuted.

The statement asked law enforcement agents to implement the directive by arresting and prosecuting offenders.

To give vent to the new policy, two major liquor dealers in the state were arrested over the weekend and would be charged to court soon.

In the same manner, operatives of the board also recently seized and destroyed N28 million worth of assorted liquor in Minna.


https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2018/06/11/sharia-niger-revokes-licences-of-liquor-dealers/
"If the Muslims... had the choice between two states, secular and religious, they would vote for the religious and flee to the secular."

- Ali Al-Wardi (Iraqi sociologist)
TravelRe: Canada Spouse Open Work Permit (sowp)timeline by Teejay2033(m): 9:18pm On Dec 10, 2023
[quote author=OkukuOne post=127405797][/quote]Thanks. God bless you🙏
TravelRe: Canadian Student Visa Thread Part 23 by Teejay2033(m):
Hello House!

Wife just got an admission for September, 2024. The husband will be applying for SOWP. Can they both apply now? Won't it be too early to apply for thier visas?

Also, is it advisable for them to apply together or for the wife to apply first?

If the wife decides to apply first and she gets her study visa approved, can the husband apply for SOWP immediately while the wife is still in Nigeria?

Thank you.
TravelRe: Canada Spouse Open Work Permit (sowp)timeline by Teejay2033(m): 12:24am On Dec 10, 2023
Hello House!

Wife just got an admission for September, 2024. The husband will be applying for SOWP. Can they both apply now? Won't it be too early to apply for thier visas?

Also, it is advisable for them to apply together or for the wife to apply first?

If the wife decides to apply first and she gets her study visa approved, can the husband apply for SOWP immediately while the wife is still in Nigeria?

Thank you.
TravelRe: Canadian Student Visa Thread Part 23 by Teejay2033(m): 1:29pm On Dec 09, 2023
Hello House. Trust everyone is doing great. I've got some questions:

1. What is the average student visa processing time?

2. My spouse recently secured an admission for September, 2024. Can we start our application now?

3. If we start now, won't our application experience undue delay?


Thank you.

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