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Benin again the love abroad,I fear this people........ |
The same God that guide and protect you through out JANUARY TO THIS DAY will see you through the (ember month) remaining part of the year a prayer to all nairalanders YOU SHALL SEE 2014 amen.... |
M.O.D front page let nigerian see.. |
ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl Posted by: legis admin Posted date: August 27, 2013 | 5:48 pm In: DEMOCRACY LEGISREPORTS NG – Leaders of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) who were on public protest on the streets of Calabar and key officials of Socialist Party of Nigeria (SPN) who, too, were on similar mission, threw caution to the wind when both engaged in a free-for-all fight opposite Governor Liyel Imoke’s office in Calabar yesterday. None of the parties agreed to allow peace to reign as each wanted to spear-head their protesting group into the governor’s office. When SPN leaders saw that ASUU officials, Non Academic Staff of Universities, National Union of Teachers, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities in collaboration with Joint Action Front (JAF) were having upper hands, they ordered their boys to shove the ASUU officials aside and take over the protest. This therefore caused both groups to drag themselves about; punching, tearing each other banners and calling themselves names. It took the hard intervention of mobile policemen on patrol in the neighbourhood and those at the governor’s office to separate both officials and to restore peace. An ASP that led the police team warned them against further disruption of public peace otherwise they would have themselves to blame. Speaking for leader of the SPN, Segun Sango, an official that refused to disclose his name, said that they were not actually out to disrupt the mass protest by ASUU and JAF to save public education but to join forces with them as they too have been at the vanguard in condemning what he called ‘federal government’ recalcitrance’, adding that ASUU and other Trade Unions must mobnilise for. Chairperson of JAF, Dr Dipo Fashina could not immediately comment on the street brawl by his men and those of SPN but an official of ASUU said SPN came from nowhere to hijack a well-intended protest which they had invested much resources to express their disgust over federal government’s disregard for public education. This report was prepared by our reporter in Calabar. Source ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl http:///CBZL8NRDPm |
ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl Posted by: legis admin Posted date: August 27, 2013 | 5:48 pm In: DEMOCRACY LEGISREPORTS NG – Leaders of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) who were on public protest on the streets of Calabar and key officials of Socialist Party of Nigeria (SPN) who, too, were on similar mission, threw caution to the wind when both engaged in a free-for-all fight opposite Governor Liyel Imoke’s office in Calabar yesterday. None of the parties agreed to allow peace to reign as each wanted to spear-head their protesting group into the governor’s office. When SPN leaders saw that ASUU officials, Non Academic Staff of Universities, National Union of Teachers, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities in collaboration with Joint Action Front (JAF) were having upper hands, they ordered their boys to shove the ASUU officials aside and take over the protest. This therefore caused both groups to drag themselves about; punching, tearing each other banners and calling themselves names. It took the hard intervention of mobile policemen on patrol in the neighbourhood and those at the governor’s office to separate both officials and to restore peace. An ASP that led the police team warned them against further disruption of public peace otherwise they would have themselves to blame. Speaking for leader of the SPN, Segun Sango, an official that refused to disclose his name, said that they were not actually out to disrupt the mass protest by ASUU and JAF to save public education but to join forces with them as they too have been at the vanguard in condemning what he called ‘federal government’ recalcitrance’, adding that ASUU and other Trade Unions must mobnilise for. Chairperson of JAF, Dr Dipo Fashina could not immediately comment on the street brawl by his men and those of SPN but an official of ASUU said SPN came from nowhere to hijack a well-intended protest which they had invested much resources to express their disgust over federal government’s disregard for public education. This report was prepared by our reporter in Calabar. Source ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl http:///CBZL8NRDPm |
ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl Posted by: legis admin Posted date: August 27, 2013 | 5:48 pm In: DEMOCRACY LEGISREPORTS NG – Leaders of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) who were on public protest on the streets of Calabar and key officials of Socialist Party of Nigeria (SPN) who, too, were on similar mission, threw caution to the wind when both engaged in a free-for-all fight opposite Governor Liyel Imoke’s office in Calabar yesterday. None of the parties agreed to allow peace to reign as each wanted to spear-head their protesting group into the governor’s office. When SPN leaders saw that ASUU officials, Non Academic Staff of Universities, National Union of Teachers, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities in collaboration with Joint Action Front (JAF) were having upper hands, they ordered their boys to shove the ASUU officials aside and take over the protest. This therefore caused both groups to drag themselves about; punching, tearing each other banners and calling themselves names. It took the hard intervention of mobile policemen on patrol in the neighbourhood and those at the governor’s office to separate both officials and to restore peace. An ASP that led the police team warned them against further disruption of public peace otherwise they would have themselves to blame. Speaking for leader of the SPN, Segun Sango, an official that refused to disclose his name, said that they were not actually out to disrupt the mass protest by ASUU and JAF to save public education but to join forces with them as they too have been at the vanguard in condemning what he called ‘federal government’ recalcitrance’, adding that ASUU and other Trade Unions must mobnilise for. Chairperson of JAF, Dr Dipo Fashina could not immediately comment on the street brawl by his men and those of SPN but an official of ASUU said SPN came from nowhere to hijack a well-intended protest which they had invested much resources to express their disgust over federal government’s disregard for public education. This report was prepared by our reporter in Calabar. Source ACADEMIC: ASUU officials, SPN engages in street brawl http:///CBZL8NRDPm |
One mans(G.E.J) action has affected the Niger delta students in what we call revenge.... |
Buhaha! Buhahaha! my white teeth represent:-Na book we go chop,give the money and get your admission I am happy you are happy that 9iaja for you. ![]() |
One mans(G.E.J) action has affected the Niger delta students in what we call revenge.... |
ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU ASUU |
That my wide Mouth it represent ASUU CALL OF STRIKE January 7th 2014... Just 50 likes abeg. ![]() |
that my white teeth... |
Lie big fat lie........... |
:DWow 100 likes abeg.. |
Wow 100 likes abeg.. |
Wow 100 like abeg.. |
If you have the money and no education insult if you have education and no money #insult.You can't please nigerians,some say money is not every thing then is it poverty that is every thing?? |
Private Universities In Nigeria And Their School Fees List of Nigerian Private Universities And Their School Fees: American University Of Nigeria => N1,590,000 Achievers University, Owo => N420, 000 Adeleke University,Ede N350,000.00 Ajayi Crowder University => N500,000 Babcock University => N620,000 Benson Idahosa => N500,000 Bowen University, Iwo => N750,000 Covenant University => N432,000 Crawford University => N480,000 Novena University => N400,000 Igbinedion University Okada => N643,000 Joseph Ayo Babalola University => N436,000 Lead City University => N550,500 Obong University Nigeria => N190,000 Oduduwa University => N164,000 Naira Rhema University => N325,000 Redeemer’s University => N571,000 Caleb University => N505,000 Afe Babalola University => N690,000 Please, if we have omitted your school and or an error in the figure kindly reply..... |
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onlyme07: Yes it is. As per the school fees,it depends on two things..where you want to live (ie ) on or off campus and your course?. . for your dept, school fees & hostel for last semester was 208k while the first semester was N178k,they added N30k for one professional practical exams stuff for your dept.It shouldn't be more than that this semester as well..better still, surf the school website for the current feesok thanx sir I will visit there website. |
Was told is the cheapest private university so hw much is the school fees for computer science per session not semester. |
onlyme07: Yes bro. NUC came around last semester and all courses were fully accredited.ok thanks |
Quran...Muhammad's Own Words: Qur'an:9:88 "The Messenger and those who believe with him, strive hard and fight with their wealth and lives in Allah's Cause." Qur'an:9:5 "Fight and kill the disbelievers wherever you find them, take them captive, harass them, lie in wait and ambush them using every stratagem of war." Qur'an:9:112 "The Believers fight in Allah's Cause, they slay and are slain, kill and are killed." Qur'an:9:29 "Fight those who do not believe until they all surrender, paying the protective tax in submission." Ishaq:325 "Muslims, fight in Allah's Cause. Stand firm and you will prosper. Help the Prophet, obey him, give him your allegiance, and your religion will be victorious." Qur'an:8:39 "Fight them until all opposition ends and all submit to Allah." Qur'an:8:39 "So fight them until there is no more Fitnah (disbelief [non-Muslims]) and all submit to the religion of Allah alone (in the whole world)." What a religion.... |
Please I need urgent reply.Would like to know if computer science has been accredited by N.U.C. |
Quran...Muhammad's Own Words: Qur'an:9:88 "The Messenger and those who believe with him, strive hard and fight with their wealth and lives in Allah's Cause." Qur'an:9:5 "Fight and kill the disbelievers wherever you find them, take them captive, harass them, lie in wait and ambush them using every stratagem of war." Qur'an:9:112 "The Believers fight in Allah's Cause, they slay and are slain, kill and are killed." Qur'an:9:29 "Fight those who do not believe until they all surrender, paying the protective tax in submission." Ishaq:325 "Muslims, fight in Allah's Cause. Stand firm and you will prosper. Help the Prophet, obey him, give him your allegiance, and your religion will be victorious." Qur'an:8:39 "Fight them until all opposition ends and all submit to Allah." Qur'an:8:39 "So fight them until there is no more Fitnah (disbelief [non-Muslims]) and all submit to the religion of Allah alone (in the whole world)." What a religion.... |
That my change.... |
We want implementation, not palliatives – ASUU on August 22, 2013 at 12:12 am in News By JOHNBOSCO AGBAKWURU ABUJA — Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, yesterday, said that the only thing that would make its striking members go back to the classrooms is the full implementation of the 2009 agreement and not any new offer or palliatives from the Federal Government. President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Fagge, who stated this in a telephone interview with Vanguard in Abuja, said it was better to get it right once and for all instead of palliative measures that would not help the system compete with other universities in the world. Fagge said that government had established the attitude of making promises without fulfilling them and that until the 2009 agreement was implemented, universities will remain closed. Beyond offers He said: “The problem is that we have gone beyond the point of making offers now. We have a comprehensive agreement, which was arrived at after three years of negotiation from 2006. “We had demands from both sides— ASUU and government— and like I said earlier, we reduced those two demands into an agreement within three years of negotiations. “And at this point, we are talking of the implementation of the agreement. So, at this point, government should not be talking or making offers. If government wasn’t ready to implement the agreement, government shouldn’t have signed the agreement.  ‘Gov’s antics’ “What is becoming clear to us is that government is still going back to its usual antics. We signed an agreement. “Government will just single out what affects the staff directly to implement and then expect them to go back and continue the deception in the system. “Without good research, teaching and effective delivery of production of knowledge, universities cannot move and this is why the nation has been blaming us for the kind of students we are graduating in our universities. “So what we are saying is that we are also tired of this. What we want is let the agreement be implemented and then we look at the impact of the implementation. “Then if there is the need for us to review the situation, we will do it through another round of negotiations. But at this point, we are not talking about making offers. Government made offers on negotiation table between 2006 and 2009.” Gov Aliyu denies report Meanwhile, Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State, yesterday, denied a media report that quoted him as saying that the team of negotiators on the side of the Federal Government in the ongoing talks with ASUU was incompetent. A national daily (not Vanguard) had in a report, yesterday, quoted Aliyu as “doubting the abilities of the negotiators on the side of the Federal Government to achieve any breakthrough in the ongoing dialogue with the lecturers” Governor Aliyu’s spokesman, Danladi Ndayebo, described the story as untrue, urging the reading public to disregard the report. He said the report was misleading and did not reflect Governor Aliyu’s comments at the National Universities Commission, NUC, in Abuja, where the governor addressed a continental workshop on the 3rd Regional Centre of Expertise, RCE. ‘What he said’ Ndayebo said: “What Governor Aliyu said is that Federal Government can afford to offer free basic and senior secondary education, while heavily subsidising tertiary education if government officials cut down on spending public funds unnecessarily. “Governor Aliyu then encouraged constant dialogue between labour unions and government, stressing that strikes were unheard of in other West African countries because there was constant dialogue between the unions and government.” |
We want implementation, not palliatives – ASUU on August 22, 2013 at 12:12 am in News By JOHNBOSCO AGBAKWURU ABUJA — Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, yesterday, said that the only thing that would make its striking members go back to the classrooms is the full implementation of the 2009 agreement and not any new offer or palliatives from the Federal Government. President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Fagge, who stated this in a telephone interview with Vanguard in Abuja, said it was better to get it right once and for all instead of palliative measures that would not help the system compete with other universities in the world. Fagge said that government had established the attitude of making promises without fulfilling them and that until the 2009 agreement was implemented, universities will remain closed. Beyond offers He said: “The problem is that we have gone beyond the point of making offers now. We have a comprehensive agreement, which was arrived at after three years of negotiation from 2006. “We had demands from both sides— ASUU and government— and like I said earlier, we reduced those two demands into an agreement within three years of negotiations. “And at this point, we are talking of the implementation of the agreement. So, at this point, government should not be talking or making offers. If government wasn’t ready to implement the agreement, government shouldn’t have signed the agreement.  ‘Gov’s antics’ “What is becoming clear to us is that government is still going back to its usual antics. We signed an agreement. “Government will just single out what affects the staff directly to implement and then expect them to go back and continue the deception in the system. “Without good research, teaching and effective delivery of production of knowledge, universities cannot move and this is why the nation has been blaming us for the kind of students we are graduating in our universities. “So what we are saying is that we are also tired of this. What we want is let the agreement be implemented and then we look at the impact of the implementation. “Then if there is the need for us to review the situation, we will do it through another round of negotiations. But at this point, we are not talking about making offers. Government made offers on negotiation table between 2006 and 2009.” Gov Aliyu denies report Meanwhile, Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State, yesterday, denied a media report that quoted him as saying that the team of negotiators on the side of the Federal Government in the ongoing talks with ASUU was incompetent. A national daily (not Vanguard) had in a report, yesterday, quoted Aliyu as “doubting the abilities of the negotiators on the side of the Federal Government to achieve any breakthrough in the ongoing dialogue with the lecturers” Governor Aliyu’s spokesman, Danladi Ndayebo, described the story as untrue, urging the reading public to disregard the report. He said the report was misleading and did not reflect Governor Aliyu’s comments at the National Universities Commission, NUC, in Abuja, where the governor addressed a continental workshop on the 3rd Regional Centre of Expertise, RCE. ‘What he said’ Ndayebo said: “What Governor Aliyu said is that Federal Government can afford to offer free basic and senior secondary education, while heavily subsidising tertiary education if government officials cut down on spending public funds unnecessarily. “Governor Aliyu then encouraged constant dialogue between labour unions and government, stressing that strikes were unheard of in other West African countries because there was constant dialogue between the unions and government.” |
We want implementation, not palliatives – ASUU on August 22, 2013 at 12:12 am in News By JOHNBOSCO AGBAKWURU ABUJA — Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, yesterday, said that the only thing that would make its striking members go back to the classrooms is the full implementation of the 2009 agreement and not any new offer or palliatives from the Federal Government. President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Fagge, who stated this in a telephone interview with Vanguard in Abuja, said it was better to get it right once and for all instead of palliative measures that would not help the system compete with other universities in the world. Fagge said that government had established the attitude of making promises without fulfilling them and that until the 2009 agreement was implemented, universities will remain closed. Beyond offers He said: “The problem is that we have gone beyond the point of making offers now. We have a comprehensive agreement, which was arrived at after three years of negotiation from 2006. “We had demands from both sides— ASUU and government— and like I said earlier, we reduced those two demands into an agreement within three years of negotiations. “And at this point, we are talking of the implementation of the agreement. So, at this point, government should not be talking or making offers. If government wasn’t ready to implement the agreement, government shouldn’t have signed the agreement.  ‘Gov’s antics’ “What is becoming clear to us is that government is still going back to its usual antics. We signed an agreement. “Government will just single out what affects the staff directly to implement and then expect them to go back and continue the deception in the system. “Without good research, teaching and effective delivery of production of knowledge, universities cannot move and this is why the nation has been blaming us for the kind of students we are graduating in our universities. “So what we are saying is that we are also tired of this. What we want is let the agreement be implemented and then we look at the impact of the implementation. “Then if there is the need for us to review the situation, we will do it through another round of negotiations. But at this point, we are not talking about making offers. Government made offers on negotiation table between 2006 and 2009.” Gov Aliyu denies report Meanwhile, Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State, yesterday, denied a media report that quoted him as saying that the team of negotiators on the side of the Federal Government in the ongoing talks with ASUU was incompetent. A national daily (not Vanguard) had in a report, yesterday, quoted Aliyu as “doubting the abilities of the negotiators on the side of the Federal Government to achieve any breakthrough in the ongoing dialogue with the lecturers” Governor Aliyu’s spokesman, Danladi Ndayebo, described the story as untrue, urging the reading public to disregard the report. He said the report was misleading and did not reflect Governor Aliyu’s comments at the National Universities Commission, NUC, in Abuja, where the governor addressed a continental workshop on the 3rd Regional Centre of Expertise, RCE. ‘What he said’ Ndayebo said: “What Governor Aliyu said is that Federal Government can afford to offer free basic and senior secondary education, while heavily subsidising tertiary education if government officials cut down on spending public funds unnecessarily. “Governor Aliyu then encouraged constant dialogue between labour unions and government, stressing that strikes were unheard of in other West African countries because there was constant dialogue between the unions and government.” |
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I was band from likes and comment on POLITICAL SECTION please MoD kindly Activate me back on. |
One mans(G.E.J) action has affected the Niger delta students in what we call revenge....


That my change....