Tit's Posts
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southniyikaye:I is back again! my band has finished. See you in politic section. i will finish you for that side. mugun |
southniyikaye:ode ni ee |
toy guns. you no see the plastic on the tips? |
[size=16pt]Suspected herders kill 7 in Kwara community [/size] Eruku community of Kwara State has decried what it called frequent attacks by suspected Fulani mercenaries, calling on the police to come to their aid. The traditional ruler, Oba Busari Olarewaju and other stakeholders of the community during a town hall meeting lamented that over seven members of the community, including a local hunter have lost their lives to attacks by suspected herdsmen. The community however resolved not to take the laws into their hands. It urged youths to remain calm in the face of provocation. Oba Olanrewaju lamented that the community had been experiencing attacks for the past ten years. “By my record, they have killed over seven people. This has been a serious problem to us. I have personally written series of letters to the authorities concerned, even to the state House of Assembly. “We held meetings with Seriki Bororo on this issue more than ten times, including the DPO and traditional council of Ekiti Local Government Area at Osi on the need to live in harmony with one another, but to no avail. We want government and the law enforcement agency to come to our aid. “The community has hunters who are battle ready but we don’t want to take laws into our hand. And if possible, these herdsmen should be settled in cattle ranches. “We don’t want them to continue to kill us and destroy our property. Government should do something about it urgently in the interest of peace and harmonious living”, he said. Also speaking, President of Eruku Descendant Union (EDU), Chief Emmanuel Oni, said community leaders and the traditional institution in Ekiti Local Government Area were disturbed about the situation and are working with relevant stakeholders, including the police and the leadership of Fulani community to tackle it. “The government is aware of our plight, likewise the police. The authority concerned has taken necessary steps to arrest the situation. You can see armed mobile policemen, they are here to protect our lives and property”, he said. The state Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Ajayi Okasanmi said the command was aware of the matter, adding that preliminary investigation had commenced into the incident. He assured the villagers of full protection, even as he advised them not to take the laws into their hands. |
southniyikaye:you be illiterate ni. lobbish |
Somebody has eat the hand that feed him. - Izik Boro |
I will slaughter you, and if Allah permit it, I will eat you - Ibrahim Shekau |
You cannot cover belle with hand - Obafemi Awolowo |
qbd2:who cares? illiterate |
southniyikaye:the murderators still band me. i cannot talk for politics! na only here i fit talk. Buhari will punish the murderator who band me! do not worry, i will soon come out. i will give you apc pians guys hell. |
How Ibadan DPO was murdered in suspected kidnappers’ den 0 BY OUR REPORTER ON APRIL 6, 2015 NATIONAL FROM OLUSEYE OJO, IBADAN Fragile peace currently pervades Adekile in Orita-Aperin area of Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. Four persons were said to have lost their lives over a clash that ensued when a suspected kidnappers’ den was discovered in the community last Wednesday. The victims, Daily Sun gathered, include a Divisional Police Officer (DPO), who was a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), in Agodi Area Command, Ibadan, two boys in the community and an old man found in the building suspected to be the kidnappers’ den. It was further learnt that the pandemonium began when a child, who was said to have been missing for several days, was found in the underground apartment of the alleged building, which is opposite Ibadan Grammar School, Orita- Aperin. The youths refused to give the details and how the child could be located. The police were said to have been alerted to the development, which allegedly led to the arrest of the owner of the building. Eyewitnesses said the deceased DPO led the team of policemen to the scene. On getting to the scene, the cops reportedly met a mob, which welcomed their arrival. But the situation went violent when the law enforcement agents prevented the irate youths in the community from destroying the suspected building. Sources said the angry youths discountenanced the directives that they should not take the law into their hands and pelted the policemen with stones. When Daily Sun visited the scene, the house and the two buildings beside it had been set ablaze. The youths were also seen with hammers, clubs, chisel and other equipment, as they went about destroying the houses. It was also an opportunity for some people to loot personal belongings and other items found in the building. As soon as the angry youths sighted this reporter and the photojournalist alighting from the motorcycle that took them to the scene, they mistook them for policemen. They called the attention of other youths and they were shouting: “Kill them. We will kill you. What do you want here?” They approached the journalists with dangerous weapons. But the newshounds too quickly responded by shouting that they were journalists. And when it appeared many of the youths did not understand English, the two informed the restless residents in Yoruba that they were reporters. Some of them demanded the journalists’ identification. And when they saw the identity cards, they provided security for the journalists among themselves and offered to take the journalists round the scene. The first place they led the journalists to was the spot where the dead body of an old man was laid. Different sorts of charms were placed beside the lifeless body. Then, the youths led the newsmen to the suspected kidnappers’ building. Some holes that looked like wells were sighted in the building. Ladders were also sighted inside some of the holes. But they warned the journalists not to attempt going down into any of the holes, noting that special security might be needed to get there. In one of the rooms in the building, two police uniforms were sighted. While one is sky blue, the other one is black. But the two bear the same name. The name on the uniform is Akinbehinje Felix and the service number on it is 508347. In a chat with Daily Sun on why they killed a policeman, some of the angry youths alleged that the police started the confrontation by shooting one of them, simply identified as Rilwan. According to them, Rilwan died immediately. This, they claimed, forced them to go haywire, adding that they thought the policemen were trying to shield the man from them, as they had planned to mete out some jungle justice to him. “We responded by stoning them. When they began to shoot at us, some of us too responded by firing at them. For me, I don’t have a gun and I have never touched one before. But some of the youths in this community have guns. I don’t know them. All I know is that the police fired at us and some of us too fired back,” said a boy, who refused to mention his name. But how the DPO was killed was not yet known as at the time of filing this report. While some said he was shot dead, other people said he was stoned and later butchered. The youths also explained how the old man whose lifeless body was found beside the building was killed. One young man told the reporter that the man probably thought people in the area had gone to their different homes at about 10:30p.m on Wednesday, adding that the man did not know that many youths were hiding around, waiting to see who would enter or come out of the building at night. “The man came out of the building in the night and the youths saw traces that a person had come out of the place. But he too saw the people and started dodging them. He was proving stubborn when he was accosted. They saw many charms on him. They asked him where he was coming from and where he was going, but he could not give satisfactory answers,” the young man said. Asked whether any of the youths knew the dead man in the community, another boy responded: “We don’t know the man in this community. But we identified him in one of the pictures that were brought out of the building. We have never seen him here.” A resident of Adekile, who introduced himself as Mr. Sola Ezekiel, told this reporter: “There is an underground apartment in this building. They kill people there. What happened here is a sad development. If we have a government in Oyo State, they should investigate what happened here. “We have seen a lot of people that died here. I want to know whether the allegation that the building is a kidnappers’ den is true or not. A lot of charms were found in the building. We also want to know the owner of the house, whether the person is alive or not.” Another youth, who introduced himself as Mr. Titilope Oluwole, also told the reporter: “I was here on Wednesday, but the policemen did not allow anybody to enter. The police shot one boy. His name is Rilwan. He should be about 25 years. The police shot him because he was one of the youths that insisted that they must enter the building but the police refused. When the pressure was much, they shot him. I don’t know anything about whether a policeman died or not. If any policeman died, it did not happen in this vicinity.” When asked why they also burnt the two buildings beside the suspected den of kidnappers, one of the youths simply responded: “There is no way kidnapping activities would be going on here and the people living in the other two buildings would not know about it. This is why we also punished them.” The name and service number on the police uniform found in one of the rooms in the suspected building was also given to a police source, who works in the state Police Command. He promised to work on it and get back to the reporter. Meanwhile, the Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Mohammed Katsina, has vowed to ensure that those involved in the murderer of the DPO would be arrested and made to face justice. While conducting the state governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, round the scene of the incident, the police boss stated that the slain police officer went to Adekile in response to a distress call by one of the residents in the area, who alleged that her baby was kidnapped and kept inside a particular building at Adekile. According to Katsina, the DPO visited the area and inspected the building in question but could not find anything relating to the lodged complaints. But while he was explaining to the youths in the area to remain calm, as further investigation would be carried out, the DPO was attacked and shot in the head. Katsina explained that the DPO, being a gallant officer, also managed to fire at his attacker before he fell down. The attacker reportedly died on the way to the hospital. The police boss reiterated the commitment of the police force to ensuring that all culprits in the DPO attack were arrested to face the wrath of the law. Governor Ajimobi, in his response, appealed to the people of the state to avoid violence in all ramifications, noting that no development could take place in an atmosphere of violence. He pledge his support to the police to ensure that the perpetrators of the devilish act were brought to book. As at the time of filling this report, the entire Adekile area still being closely watched by armed policemen. |
just squeeze yar face like it is not sweeting you. |
nairaimporter:we have sent jonathan to otuoke. |
WE WILL SLAUGHTER YOU AND IF ALLAH PERMITS IT, WE WILL EAT YOU - MALAM SHEKAU |
Y Yahooooo 4 hours ago 0 15 Peaceful Muslims need to speak out against horrific terror attacks like this. More Expand Replies (5) Reply J joeblack 3 hours ago 0 8 But the west will make you believe lack of opportunity among youths of the Muslim world is responsible for violence. Then we soon noticed that the diaper bomber has a wealthy dad; lives in a comfortable home in London. Muhammad Attah of the 911 era returned unspent money to his handlers. More Collapse Replies (2) Reply J James 2 hours ago 1 1 Only the liberal west harbors these delusions. More A axed 1 hour ago 0 1 Osama jest like Obama was milioneaire. More J John 1 hour ago 0 3 Four guys killed 140 people? Wow! Those gun-free zones are really effective at concentrating helpless victims for easy access. More Reply N NewBikeOldBIKE 34 minutes ago 0 2 we've got the son of another Kenyan government official in America helping Islamic terrorists. More Reply J John 2 hours ago 0 3 Is he an Obama cousin? More Expand Replies (1) Reply A Al 8 minutes ago 0 0 It is amazing that in Kenya, 10% of the population is Muslim and it commits 90% of the murder. More Reply B BillW 2 hours ago 0 2 We must incarcerate for life the family, blow up the mosque and kill the mullah that runs it as a starter in all these attacks. Without punishment it is just glory to the killers More Reply C CONRAD 1 hour ago 0 0 Now we know. The real enemies are always from within. So sad and unfortunate. Condolences again. More Reply |
B Bond000000007 4 hours ago 1 4 Kennedy; you are very right. This whole massacre is a demonstration of how ethnicized political leadership in Kenya since Moi's regime todate which has been used in favour of Somalis against Kenyan communities perceived as threats or even taken as none Kenyans has an unfathomable cost for our country. There is no ethnic community in Kenya that is entrenched in the political, business, security commerce and any other sector more than the Somalis save for Indians. This is how they are used by the ethnicized political leaders to achieve their goals. Now, what are Kenyans having in return for this? A seemingly multi-pronged mission executed in collaboration with al shabab against Kenya which may not necessarily exclude Somalia separatism! Everythign points to this direction and we may still be pretending that ooh, let us not divide Kenyans on religion or otherwise. Where does the loyalty of the son of a political leader who most likely has had unqualified favours done to them more than the average Kenyan belong; to Somalis al shabab or Kenya? The answer is obvious! The consequences of letting people whose loyalty is to their ethnicity access everything from security to commerce in every part of the country can only be a disaster for this country. After Westgate, some have been talking in the media of mistakes made for several years and the mistakes are still continuing at the cost of the majority of Kenyan communities and not the ethnic leaning politicians. Kenyans are suffering because of ethnic politics and the politics of power for the sake of enrichment at the cost of the public! If Kenyans do not make a choice, then the saying that actions especially of acute ethnic divisions and ways of doing things in the country will obviously only accelerate the dividends of poverty, protracted wars with separatists for the sake of ethnicized Kenyan politics and terrorist massacres. One cannot imagine that over 140 people can be just massacred like that and there is a group calling itself security "experts". If we are honest and love this country, then we have to accept that this massacre and the massacre of Kenyans and Americans at the US Embassy in Nairobi tells everything wrong about Kenya!. The ethnic leaning politicians have been corruptly and unconstitutionally strengthening those whose hands are chopping the feeding person - Kenya. May the Lord rest the soul of the departed in eternal peace. Reply |
27 Comments Sign in to post a comment Popular Now Newest Oldest Most Replied U Uchenna 2 hours ago 0 5 The opinion that terrorism by Muslim sects like Boko Haram in Nigeria is the result of bad governance and resulting poverty has once again been shown to be false. Not too long ago, a young Nigerian whose father was a retired wealthy banker was apprehended for attempting to blow up a U.S. airline. His father similarly contacted security agencies when he discovered his son was missing. It is comforting to know there are Muslim parents that care about the greater society, however more obviously needs to be done by parents and other stakeholders in the Muslim world. It is more of a failure in the emirates than the government in places like Kenya and Nigeria where Islamic rule and elected government exist side-by-side. Denial is a major problem for parents of dysfunctional children. In Nigeria, for example, the initial reaction of the Muslim leaders in the north to the atrocities of Boko Haram was to describe the action of the terrorists as not being unique to the Islamic north. The Sultan was quick to point out there was robbery and kidnapping going on in the south east, for example. Although his statement is true, these crimes are not being primarily committed against people because of the opposing religious beliefs. Moreover, Christians in the south of Nigeria do not become defensive when valid accusations are leveled against fellow Christians. Islamic extremism and the resulting terrorism is motivated by the unique interpretation of Islam by some sects. The manner in which these adherents understand the Koran and the Hadith (Sayings of Mohammed ), determines their world view and consequently kind of Jihad--contention, struggle, holy war. The only people that can provide a lasting solution to terrorism is Muslims themselves. If the world of Islamic faithfuls that speak out against acts of terror against people of other religions and ethnicities really want to bring an end to these unGodly acts, they must come together as a family or nation or body of believers to address the loose areas of Islamic doctrinal interpretation. Even if they cannot enforce a particular way of seeing things, they can adopt and publish an official position. This will isolate the terrorists as well as vindicate Islam before the rest of society. More Expand Replies (1) Reply |
Kenya identifies one of four al Shabaab gunmen as son of government official: interior ministry One of Garissa attackers 'identified as Kenyan law graduate' AFP NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya on Sunday identified one of the al Shabaab gunmen who massacred students at a northeastern university as the son of a Kenyan government official, the interior ministry said. Spokesman Mwenda Njoka said Abdirahim Abdullahi was one of the four gunmen who attacked the Garissa University College campus on Thursday, killing nearly 150 people. "The father had reported to security agents that his son had disappeared from home... and was helping the police try to trace his son by the time the Garissa terror attack happened," Njoka told Reuters in a text message. (Reporting by Drazen Jorgic; editing by John Stonestreet) |
Osinbanjo is now the leader of all christians in Nigeria. Onaiyekan, Oshijefaor, Oyedepo, Mbaka, Redeem man,Chrisses (okotie, oyakhilome), TB should all step aside! |
[size=14pt]We will Slaughter You - Shekau [/size] (CNN)This is the time of the year when Christians the world over -- more than 2 billion of us -- reflect upon the crucifixion and resurrection of our Lord. In light of the tragic massacre of Christian college students in Kenya on Thursday, and the ongoing threat against Christians in other nations, this Holy Week we are calling upon Christians to also reflect upon the crucifixion, beheading, stoning, enforced slavery, sexual abuse, human trafficking, harassment, bombing and displacement of hundreds of thousands of Christians -- and others -- whose faith alone has made them a target of religious extremists. Countless lives have been utterly destroyed in nations such as Iraq, Syria, Libya, Pakistan, India, Egypt, Kenya and Nigeria. In June 2012, Bishop Shlemon Warduni of Iraq told the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, "We beg you to help. We want only peace, security, and freedom. Please no more death, no more explosions, no more injustice." By then, nearly every remaining church in Iraq had constructed a blast wall around its building to buffet the threat of the inevitable church bombing. This crisis escalated substantially last summer when ISIS swept like lightning through Iraq's Nineveh province, capturing the country's second-largest city, Mosul; a city that was until 2014 a home of a thriving Christian community, there centuries before Islam. Again and again the world did not respond as it might have, and now the inconceivable has happened: Iraq's Nineveh Plain has been emptied of its ancient Christianity community, which existed there for more than 1,500 years. On March 27, in a presentation to the U.N. Security Council, Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Raphael Sako referred to the present reality of his fellow Iraqi Christians as a "catastrophic situation." He's right. Rarely since the first century has the church in the East faced persecution on this scale. Christian communities that took 2,000 years to build, and that were started by the apostles themselves, lie in ashes between the Tigris and the Euphrates. Survivors waste away as refugees, often in deplorable conditions, with no homes or churches to return to if the region eventually stabilizes. Whether they be Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant, Christian communities are united in what Pope Francis has called an "ecumenism of blood," recognizing that Christianity is experiencing more martyrdom today than in the first century. This is not an exaggerated or contrived crisis. As Nina Shea, director of the Hudson's Institute's Center for Religious Freedom, has aptly put it, "Piece by piece, Middle Eastern Christianity is being shattered." Our concern is not to the exclusion of anyone else under threat by these religious fanatics, and we reject those who believe that this evil is reflective of the majority of Muslims whose community has actually experienced the most casualties in this conflict. It is also true that Christianity faces a legitimate threat of extinction in several parts of Iraq and Syria and it faces a growing threat in nations such as Nigeria. In solidarity with those being threatened we agree with the words delivered by Jordan's King Abdullah II at the United Nations last fall, "Christians are an integral part of [the Middle East's] past, present and future." When history writes of our time will we be able to say that we tried everything in our power to cease this attempt to eliminate 2,000 years of Christianity from the Middle East and to stop this threat before it spreads to other nations? These communities need our love and support like never before, and they also need security and protection from the world like never before. This Easter we reflect upon the words of a Christian who was himself beheaded for his faith alone. He converted to Christianity one day on a road to Damascus, Syria, when his name was changed from Saul to Paul. In a letter to Christians living in another dangerous place in another persecuted time, he wrote, "Pray that we may be delivered from wicked and evil people." This Easter, let us earnestly pray with all the love of Christ for all those in harm's way. |
eyewitnesses? post-natal depression? |
ayindejimmy:did 1000 people buy tickets or is the money from cocaine? |
seankay:that is ogbomosho man! not oyinbo. anytime you see 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3-4-5-6-7, that is kiriji war: ogbomosho! |
this is good ooo. any time i get motor, i go snap am passport, incase he lost. |
true story: my brother is a changit. (you know afonja yoruba naw). he works in nnpc or dpr. (all na the same to me) he tell me corruption is 90% that jonathan and his people are shopping 90% of the money in kworruption! (he is one of the oga there so he should know even though he refuse to give me money to add to my shop. they even send him oversea every month). so i tell am this means by July or August, Buhari government will have 900 times more money than jonathan government! since they will not eat the money by quorruption! he say make i believe! i don siddon look. |
‘Change’ unseated Nigeria’s president, but may be slow in coming Depleted treasury, low oil prices may hamper the transformation incoming president Muhammadu Buhari promised to bring April 3, 2015 3:00PM ET by Chris Stein ABUJA, Nigeria — Muhammadu Buhari won an upset victory over Nigeria president Goodluck Jonathan this week using a catchphrase that’s familiar to anyone who’s paid attention to American politics over the past eight years: “change.” Buhari leveraged the same slogan used to much success by Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign to unseat Jonathan and his ruling People's Democratic Party, which has had its candidates occupy the presidency since Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999. The change Buhari promised was an end to the Boko Haram insurgency that has killed thousands of Nigerians and forced over a million to flee. He campaigned on a reputation as an anti-corruption crusader, and made populist pledges such as stipends for poor people and health care for all. Jonathan campaigned on the motto of continuity for his “Transformation Agenda,” saying the growth Nigeria enjoyed during his first elected term — during which the country recalculated its GDP to become the largest economy in Africa — would continue if he could have another four years. But voters weren’t convinced, and sent Jonathan packing, with about 2.5 million fewer votes than Buhari. But when the former military general and coup leader Buhari takes office at the end of May, he’ll inherit a treasury depleted by the global drop in the price of oil, Nigeria’s biggest export. He will be responsible for figuring out how to put Boko Haram down for good, and what to do about the legions of people that have fled across Nigeria and over its borders. And he’ll be up against an entrenched political culture in Nigeria that’s allowed corruption to flourish for years. Fulfilling an election promise of change, in short, will be a lot harder than making one. “He’s going to struggle with all of the programs he’d like to deliver, honestly, in the current economic climate,” said Dawn Dimowo, a Nigeria-based analyst for Africa Practice consultancy. “And I think Buhari himself recognizes this.” This was Buhari’s fourth shot at the presidency, and he won by building a coalition of his hardcore supporters in Nigeria’s north, where he’s from, while winning states he’d previously failed to in the country’s southwest and central belt. Jonathan, in turn, only won his home state and its neighbors in the Niger Delta, along with states in the southeast and a few in the middle. “They built a political machine that spanned the length and breadth of most of the country,” political commentator Chris Ngwodo said of Buhari’s campaign. “That was probably the game changer in all of this.” Thumbnail image for Nigerian election a triumph for democracy Nigerian election a triumph for democracy President-elect Buhari’s in tray will be full, but he has a mandate to end a corrupt and insecure era On the campaign trail, Buhari promised universal health care and monthly $25 payments to vulnerable people. His party erected billboards with a simple message: “we will defeat Boko Haram,” and said he’d never let the group overrun territory in the country’s northeast again, as it was able to do on Jonathan’s watch. But when Buhari moves to the capital Abuja in May, he’ll be inheriting a budget ravaged by the global slide in crude prices. The price of oil, which makes up 70 percent of Nigeria’s government revenue, is now fetching a paltry price of around $50 per barrel. “He’s going to be inheriting a very depleted account,” said Chuba Ezekwesili, research analyst at the Nigerian Economic Summit Group. “Tax collection,” which would insulate the state and federal government from oil price shocks “is down and it’s going to remain down for a long time. That’s not going to change in the near future,” he added. Similarly battered is Nigeria’s currency, which has lost ground against the dollar thanks to oil, thus hurting Nigeria’s foreign reserves. “Nigerians will have to exhibit a bit of patience and not expect immediate relief from the government,” said Idayat Hassan of the Centre for Democracy and Development West Africa. “There might have to be structural adjustment, there might have to be austerity.” Big social spending programs, such as universal health care, may have to wait, Ezekwesili said. Nigeria’s struggling finances makes Buhari’s task of rebuilding the northeast — crucial to making sure Boko Haram goes away for good — even harder, Dimowo said. The group started taking over territory last year, eventually overrunning an area about the size of Belgium. Earlier this year, Nigeria joined with armies from neighboring Chad, Niger and Cameroon to rout Boko Haram from its hideouts, along with the help of foreign mercenaries. Meanwhile, a million displaced people are spread across the country, with some living in camps in the northeast, relying on handouts from Nigeria’s emergency agencies or from local philanthropists. Hundreds of thousands of others are in camps in neighboring countries. Their hometowns, as Nigeria’s military has discovered as they’ve retaken them, have been burned and looted by the insurgents. Boko Haram is on its back foot now thanks to the multinational offensive against it. But experts believe making it go away completely will require an approach that goes beyond force. “You need to address some of the issues … socioeconomic factors that would allow that to happen,” Dimowo said of Boko Haram’s conquest of towns in the northeastern Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states last year. “And that, honestly, is easier said than done. It’s anybody’s guess what specific steps he will take to do that.” And the needed steps will likely be expensive. Northeastern Nigeria was overwhelmingly poor long before Boko Haram emerged. Analysts agree that one way Buhari can help stabilize Nigeria’s finances is to cut down on the corruption that keeps the wealth of Africa’s largest economy from being spread equitably through the population. The 72-year-old campaigned on cutting down corruption, bolstered by his reputation as a no-nonsense military ruler from 1983 to 1985. How he plans to do that remains to be seen. Ngwodo said he expected Buhari to grant prosecutorial autonomy to Nigeria’s corruption watchdog, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, while Hassan said a constitutional clause that grants prosecutorial immunity to sitting presidents, governors and their deputies should be done away with to spur accountability. But many of the top leaders of the APC are former PDP members who defected when the party formed as a union of Nigeria’s main opposition groups in 2013. How truly different his government will be from the PDP will only be known after the May 29 inauguration. |
Sorry ooo. You are gone. the man may have been looking for a reason to kick you out. your problem is that you are illiterate. You only read "love your neighbour" because you are illiterate, you stop there. You miss out the commandment: "but dont get cut". Love your neighbour but dont get cut |
Jonathan should hand over this week. |
Buhari did not promise to end boko haram in two months! He promised to end it in one month! |
eyeview:look at your letter of employment, it often says : any other duties that may be assigned to you. carrying hand bag is one of those any other duties. |
wetin now? this na normal business in ibadan. is not new thing. the only thing is that we do not eat the whole body like Igbo. we use it to do gbomo gbomo. we only eats small parts. |
you cannot kill freedom you cannot kill spirit. ban all you like |
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