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God bless you for these post We celebrate mediocrity too much Thank you. McTominay: |
These flyover project is not Gov Yahaya Bello project I dont know what we gain from spreading fake new. These contracts have been awarded and paid for by the past administration under Capt WADA Please take these down. And let's face reality Thank you. happiness32: |
To start is was never Gov yahaya Bello project These project have awarded and paid for by the past administration I dont know why he keeps gettingcredit from these project. Unfortunately because he could not get back the fund from the TEC company they awarded the contract to hence the project So disregard the idea that the project was actually for his administration Thank you Sebastine1994: |
Damoxy: |
Is dis one new |
[color=#000000][/color]pix of the giant that worth 1.9m na waoh,for these kind economy ![]()
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Nija scores |
Federal polytechnic idah Ojogbane joel Stream II 07057749270 Thank |
Do we have a whatsapp group in river state,if yes pls add me up 07057749270 have been posted there stream II ![]() |
Here is my number add me up group admin 07057749270 rivers stream II |
The Rivers State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of desperation in its moves to stop the Senate from confirming the nomination of ex-Rivers Governor Rotimi Amaechi as a minister. APC, through its Rivers Publicity Secretary, Chris Finebone, alleged that PDP members have now resorted to blackmailing Mr. Amaechi on the internet with a view to rubbing his image ahead of his screening by the Senate. Finebone however, declared that the PDP will not succeed in its campaign against the former governor. The state PDP Chairman, Chief Felix Obuah, dismissed the APC defence of Amaechi as laughable and childish. The APC in a statement cited two stories which suggested that Amaechi bribed some APC leaders to facilitate his screening by the Senate and that the federal government is intimidating PDP Senators over the Amaechi matter. It said:”In both online publications, agents of Governor Wike and the PDP tried to justify the huge funds the Rivers State Governor is providing to them by concocting wild, pedestrian stories in form of news, which are put out to unsuspecting and gullible online readers. “These online outlets have in the past concocted many fake news stories, purporting such stories to be based on interviews with the former governor, that actually never held; they also claimed to have talked with close associates of the former governor, who they fail to name, just because confidentiality of sources is a right accorded to journalists under the law. “Again, they continue to indulge in their malfeasance, because most online readers often fail to see through such false stories and the sinister motives of those behind them. “It is important to emphasise that Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi did not speak with any journalist as stated in the story under reference. He also did not, at anytime, hold any discussions with associates, friends or any person/persons over the matter of his Senate screening at any time and certainly did not and still does not have reasons to discuss such issues with anyone, along the lines expressed by the shameless online publication. Former Governor Amaechi is at peace with himself and God. “The said publications are manifestly false in their entirety. Indeed, they are emanations from the infantile imagination of those behind them and aimed at inciting the Senators of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and blackmail them against the upcoming screening of the former governor as one of the ministerial nominees by President Muhammadu Buhari.” APC asked Senators and other Nigerians to discountenance such stories. But responding, the Rivers PDP said: “With the historic woeful defeat of the APC in the state, which it ran to total bankruptcy and near collapse notwithstanding the huge internally-generated revenue and accruements from the federal allocations, it is commonsense to fathom why they insist in remaining in office to cover up their loot. “Failure to do so explains why the APC in the state and those strangers who assisted in the looting spree, are wrapped in total confusion that is ravaging the party, leaving their members disorientated as being expressed in hollow press statements and ranting. “Amaechi would not in any way be an asset to President Muhammadu Buhari and lacks the integrity and morality to speak for Rivers people.” http://thenationonlineng.net/rivers-apc-pdp-at-war-over-amaechis-ministerial-screening/
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Where were you on the first day of October, 1960? Those who were not born then can take a honourable bow and remain . But for those of us, the surviving relics of a disappearing clan, it is time to ask some hard questions. Unlike human organisms that die and perish at once, never to be seen or heard of again, a nation can go through several incarnations. It can die and be revived. It can get up from the life support machine and walk away. It can surprise mourners at its own funeral wake by suddenly stirring and smiling. Nigeria has survived its most determined obituarists. But removing those who were not born on October 1st 1960, that is those under the age of fifty five, leaves a paltry fifteen per cent. Over the intervening decades, Nigeria has become a very young country indeed. Having spent the past fifty years railing and ranting about the iniquities and inequities of Nigeria on every independence anniversary, perhaps it is time to take another approach, to see how far we have come and how far we have fallen behind. This exercise is like taking a mental audit of the nation, viewing the nation through the mind’s eye. A nation is a permanent work in progress which requires sober introspection and even more sober interrogation. All the excoriations and bitter recriminations will neither exorcise the ghosts of the terrible past, nor will they usher in a more glorious future. Nations founder when they are founded on lazy sentiments and idle wishful thinking. Better still that this mental audit, this cerebral cinematography, takes place in a foreign land, away from the hectic hurly burly of a post-colonial African nation permanently on the boil and eternally on the brink. More often than not, it is good for one’s sense of perspective to borrow seasons and tropes from an alien land. October 1st found yours sincerely in a dozing reverie inside a cab in Dallas driven by a wonderful hybrid of a man: an ebony black person with Arabian and oriental features superimposed on a melancholic visage which make him faintly unsettling. http://thenationonlineng.net/some-times-in-the-life-of-nigeria/
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Where were you on the first day of October, 1960? Those who were not born then can take a honourable bow and remain . But for those of us, the surviving relics of a disappearing clan, it is time to ask some hard questions. Unlike human organisms that die and perish at once, never to be seen or heard of again, a nation can go through several incarnations. It can die and be revived. It can get up from the life support machine and walk away. It can surprise mourners at its own funeral wake by suddenly stirring and smiling. Nigeria has survived its most determined obituarists. But removing those who were not born on October 1st 1960, that is those under the age of fifty five, leaves a paltry fifteen per cent. Over the intervening decades, Nigeria has become a very young country indeed. Having spent the past fifty years railing and ranting about the iniquities and inequities of Nigeria on every independence anniversary, perhaps it is time to take another approach, to see how far we have come and how far we have fallen behind. This exercise is like taking a mental audit of the nation, viewing the nation through the mind’s eye. A nation is a permanent work in progress which requires sober introspection and even more sober interrogation. All the excoriations and bitter recriminations will neither exorcise the ghosts of the terrible past, nor will they usher in a more glorious future. Nations founder when they are founded on lazy sentiments and idle wishful thinking. Better still that this mental audit, this cerebral cinematography, takes place in a foreign land, away from the hectic hurly burly of a post-colonial African nation permanently on the boil and eternally on the brink. More often than not, it is good for one’s sense of perspective to borrow seasons and tropes from an alien land. October 1st found yours sincerely in a dozing reverie inside a cab in Dallas driven by a wonderful hybrid of a man: an ebony black person with Arabian and oriental features superimposed on a melancholic visage which make him faintly unsettling. http://thenationonlineng.net/some-times-in-the-life-of-nigeria/
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Former Bayelsa State Governor, Chief Timipre Sylva weekend declared that the decision by former President Goodluck Jonathan to concede defeat to President Mohammadu Buhari during the last presidential election does not make him a hero.http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/06/jonathan-does-not-deserve-heros-status-sylva/
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This man self tire me |
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