Travel › Re: General Australian student Visa Enquiries Part 2 by ZiggyMr(m): 6:49am On Mar 25, 2017 |
lusen: Good news. Naira keeps appreciating by day. heard its now $1 to 380. Hopefully it should have improved further by next week. If it does. Form A will definately be cheaper. Its possible for Form A to be obtainable at the official rate next month. I will keep my naira and my arms crossed till next month. I pray it doesn't get worse. Hw va bro, hw u dey and wat sup with ur australia movement. Exchange is still a big deal for me, i still want the euro to drop further so i can fund my acct. |
Christianity Etc › Re: Nigerian Church Uses Nicki Minaj's Photo In Relationship Seminar Poster by ZiggyMr(m): 2:04pm On Mar 19, 2017 |
Jonoshio: Bro, Have you settled in Hannover? Boss, i didnt go last year but by Gods grace i ll dis winter |
Christianity Etc › Re: A Pastor, 14 Others Accepted Islam In OFFA, Kwara State(acadip) by ZiggyMr(m): 2:03pm On Mar 19, 2017 |
Queenbalikees: e pain am. ur type are easily identify so need 2 argue wit u. Ewu Lol |
Christianity Etc › Re: Nigerian Church Uses Nicki Minaj's Photo In Relationship Seminar Poster by ZiggyMr(m): 9:28pm On Mar 05, 2017 |
Rebuke: D way we lyk to jump into conclusion here eh!
D pastor fit not even knw who nikky Minaj is sef. D concept could hav come frm who evr printed d handbills. Anythn dat ridicules d Christians rejoices d heart of satan n his agents. GOOD NEWS Jesus remains the Lord of the Universe. King of Kings and He comes soon. You guys should not jump to conclusion, the senior pastor am sure does not know who nicky is and might prolly dont know about this seminar. The program is for the youth and to be sincere with you, there are so many unilorin students there. Cant it be there campus fellowship decision to bring more students to the seminar |
Christianity Etc › Re: A Pastor, 14 Others Accepted Islam In OFFA, Kwara State(acadip) by ZiggyMr(m): 12:02pm On Feb 26, 2017 |
Queenbalikees: u no ur a waste of sperm 2 ur generatn. It no new tyn 2 me wn i c pple lyk u wu reason frm d anus. ur fradulent so call leaders(pastors) knows d tru religion wich is (islam) nd kept it 2 dem self jst 2 keep extortin frm u gullible christain wit fake preachin all in d name of satisfyin der worldly need. so pls wake up nd act fast b4 it 2 late. islam 4 life Since u know you are not gullible, why not keep a close eyes like you did not see the gullible xtians, if its working for them why come here to break melon? Wat has ur islam done to this world than kill and destroy. You people were forced to go to ile keu, and you think those gullible xtians were forced to give a pastor? Your religion is nothin but a cancer. |
Career › Re: How Much Does First Bank Pay Her Contract Staff? by ZiggyMr(m): 9:24pm On Feb 23, 2017 |
beingme: Strength and simplest comes with age that's why Union Bank is where it is today. The only bank that's 100 years in business, top 3 in Nigeria, thfe bank that supported the IDPs in 2016 and very bank that took team Nigeria to RIO. Na there u dey work? |
Politics › Re: Most Populated States In Nigeria 2017(estimates) by ZiggyMr(m): 5:41pm On Feb 19, 2017 |
Deadvalley001: [/s]
Ole! History revisionist!
stop lying to some uniformed people here.
Yaorubas have always been known as cowards,
Afonja animal pls read your history here.
They slaughtered your coward forefathers like cows.
Dahomey’s Women Warriors For the better part of 200 years, thousands of female soldiers fought and died to expand the borders of their West African kingdom. Even their conquerors, the French, acknowledged their “prodigious bravery.” 1.9K 316 224 102 9 10.5K One of Dahomeys' women warriors, with a musket, club, dagger—and her enemy's severed head. From Forbes, Dahomy and the Dahomans (1851). It is noon on a humid Saturday in the fall of 1861, and a missionary by the name of Francesco Borghero has been summoned to a parade ground in Abomey, the capital of the small West African state of Dahomey. He is seated on one side of a huge, open square right in the center of the town– Dahomey is renowned as a “Black Sparta,” a fiercely militaristic society bent on conquest, whose soldiers strike fear into their enemies all along what is still known as the Slave Coast. The maneuvers begin in the face of a looming downpour, but King Glele is eager to show off the finest unit in his army to his European guest. As Father Borghero fans himself, 3,000 heavily armed soldiers march into the square and begin a mock assault on a series of defenses designed to represent an enemy capital. The Dahomean troops are a fearsome sight, barefoot and bristling with clubs and knives. A few, known as Reapers, are armed with gleaming three-foot-long straight razors, each wielded two- handed and capable, the priest is told, of slicing a man clean in two. ADVERTISEMENT The soldiers advance in silence, reconnoitering. Their first obstacle is a wall—huge piles of acacia branches bristling with needle-sharp thorns, forming a barricade that stretches nearly 440 yards. The troops rush it furiously, ignoring the wounds that the two-inch-long thorns inflict. After scrambling to the top, they mime hand- to-hand combat with imaginary defenders, fall back, scale the thorn wall a second time, then storm a group of huts and drag a group of cringing “prisoners” to where Glele stands, assessing their performance. The bravest are presented with belts made from acacia thorns. Proud to show themselves impervious to pain, the warriors strap their trophies around their waists. The general who led the assault appears and gives a lengthy speech, comparing the valor of Dahomey’s warrior elite to that of European troops and suggesting that such equally brave peoples should never be enemies. Borghero listens, but his mind is wandering. He finds the general captivating: “slender but shapely, proud of bearing, but without affectation.” Not too tall, perhaps, nor excessively muscular. But then, of course, the general is a woman, as are all 3,000 of her troops. Father Borghero has been watching the King of Dahomey’s famed corps of “amazons,” as contemporary writers termed them—the only female soldiers in the world who then routinely served as combat troops. Dahomey– renamed Benin in 1975– showing its location in West Africa. Map: CIA World Factbook. When, or indeed why, Dahomey recruited its first female soldiers is not certain. Stanley Alpern, author of the only full-length Engish-language study of them, suggests it may have been in the 17th century, not long after the kingdom was founded by Dako, a leader of the Fon tribe, around 1625. One theory traces their origins to teams of female hunters known as gbeto, and certainly Dahomey was noted for its women hunters; a French naval surgeon named Repin reported in the 1850s that a group of 20 gbeto had attacked a herd of 40 elephants, killing three at the cost of several hunters gored and trampled. A Dahomean tradition relates that when King Gezo (1818-58) praised their courage, the gbeto cockily replied that “a nice manhunt would suit them even better,” so he drafted them drafted into his army. But Alpern cautions that there is no proof that such an incident occurred, and he prefers an alternate theory that suggests the women warriors came into existence as a palace guard in the 1720s. Women had the advantage of being permitted in the palace precincts after dark (Dahomean men were not), and a bodyguard may have been formed, Alpern says, from among the king’s “third class” wives–those considered insufficiently beautiful to share his bed and who had not borne children. Contrary to 19th century gossip that portrayed the female soldiers as sexually voracious, Dahomey’s female soldiers were formally married to the king—and since he never actually had relations with any of them, marriage rendered them celibate. Dahomey's female hunters, the gbeto, attack a herd of elephants. At least one bit of evidence hints that Alpern is right to date the formation of the female corps to the early 18th century: a French slaver named Jean- Pierre Thibault, who called at the Dahomean port of Ouidah in 1725, described seeing groups of third-rank wives armed with long poles and acting as police. And when, four years later, Dahomey’s women warriors made their first appearance in written history, they were helping to recapture the same port after it fell to a surprise attack by the Yoruba–a much more numerous tribe from the east who would henceforth be the Dahomeans’ chief enemies. Dahomey’s female troops were not the only martial women of their time. There were at least a few contemporary examples of successful warrior queens, the best-known of whom was probablyNzinga of Matamba, one of the most important figures in 17th-century Angola—a ruler who fought the Portuguese, quaffed the blood of sacrificial victims, and kept a harem of 60 male concubines, whom she dressed in women’s clothes. Nor were female guards unknown; in the mid-19th century, King Mongkut of Siam (the same monarch memorably portrayed in quite a different light by Yul Brynner in The King and I) employed a bodyguard of 400 women. But Mongkut’s guards performed a ceremonial function, and the king could never bear to send them off to war. What made Dahomey’s women warriors unique was that they fought, and frequently died, for king and country. Even the most conservative estimates suggest that, in the course of just four major campaigns in the latter half of the 19th century, they lost at least 6,000 dead, and perhaps as many as 15,000. In their very last battles, against French troops equipped with vastly superior weaponry, about 1,500 women took the field, and only about 50 remained fit for active duty by the end. King Gezo, who expanded the female corps from around 600 women to as many as 6,000. Picture: Wikicommons. None of this, of course, explains why this female corps arose only in Dahomey. Historian Robin Law, of the University of Stirling, who has made a study of the subject, dismisses the idea that the Fon viewed men and women as equals in any meaningful sense; women fully trained as warriors, he points out, were thought to “become” men, usually at the moment they disemboweled their first enemy. Perhaps the most persuasive possibility is that the Fon were so badly outnumbered by the enemies who encircled them that Dahomey’s kings were forced to conscript women. The Yoruba alone were about ten times as numerous as the Fon. Backing for this hypothesis can be found in the writings of Commodore Arthur Eardley Wilmot, a British naval officer who called at Dahomey in 1862 and observed that women heavily outnumbered men in its towns—a phenomenon that he attributed to a combination of military losses and the effects of the slave trade. Around the same time Western visitors to Abomey noticed a sharp jump in the number of female soldiers. Records suggest that there were about 600 women in the Dahomean army from the 1760s until the 1840s—at which point King Gezo expanded the corps to as many as 6,000. No Dahomean records survive to explain Gezo’s expansion, but it was probably connected to a defeat he suffered at the hands of the Yoruba in 1844. Oral traditions suggest that, angered by Dahomean raids on their villages, an army from a tribal grouping known as the Egba mounted a surprise attack that that came close to capturing Gezo and did seize much of his royal regalia, including the king’s valuable umbrella and his sacred stool. “It has been said that only two amazon ‘companies’ existed before Gezo and that he created six new ones,” Alpern notes. “If so, it probably happened at this time.” Women warriors parade outside the gates of a Dahomean town, with the severed heads of their defeated foes adorning the walls. Recruiting women into the Dahomean army was not especially difficult, despite the requirement to climb thorn hedges and risk life and limb in battle. Most West African women lived lives of forced drudgery. Gezo’s female troops lived in his compound and were kept well supplied with tobacco, alcohol and slaves–as many as 50 to each warrior, according to the noted traveler Sir Richard Burton, who visited Dahomey in the 1860s. And “when amazons walked out of the palace,” notes Alpern, “they were preceded by a slave girl carrying a bell. The sound told every male to get out of their path, retire a certain distance, and look the other way.” To even touch these women meant death. "Insensitivity training": female recruits look on as Dahomean troops hurl bound prisoners of war to a mob below. While Gezo plotted his revenge against the Egba, his new female recruits were put through extensive training. The scaling of vicious thorn hedges was intended to foster the stoical acceptance of pain, and the women also wrestled one another and undertook survival training, being sent into the forest for up to nine days with minimal rations. The aspect of Dahomean military custom that attracted most attention from European visitors, however, was “insensitivity training”—exposing unblooded troops to death. At one annual ceremony, new recruits of both sexes were required to mount a platform 16 feet high, pick up baskets containing bound and gagged prisoners of war, and hurl them over the parapet to a baying mob below. There are also accounts of female soldiers being ordered to carry out executions. Jean Bayol, a French naval officer who visited Abomey in December 1889, watched as a teenage recruit, a girl named Nanisca “who had not yet killed anyone,” was tested. Brought before a young prisoner who sat bound in a basket, she: walked jauntily up to , swung her sword three times with both hands, then calmly cut the last flesh that attached the head to the trunk… She then squeezed the blood off her weapon and swallowed it. It was this fierceness that most unnerved Western observers, and indeed Dahomey’s African enemies. Not everyone agreed on the quality of the Dahomeans’ military preparedness —European observers were disdainful of the way in which the women handled their ancient flintlock muskets, most firing from the hip rather than aiming from the shoulder, but even the French agreed that they “excelled at hand-to-hand combat” and “handled admirably.” For the most part, too, the enlarged female corps enjoyed considerable success in Gezo’s endless wars, specializing in pre-dawn attacks on unsuspecting enemy villages. It was only when they were thrown against the Egba capital, Abeokuta, that they tasted defeat. Two furious assaults on the town, in 1851 and 1864, failed dismally, partially because of Dahomean overconfidence, but mostly because Abeokuta was a formidable target—a huge town ringed with mud- brick walls and harboring a population of 50,000. Béhanzin, the last king of an independent Dahomey. By the late 1870s Dahomey had begun to temper its military ambitions. Most foreign observers suggest that the women’s corps was reduced to 1,500 soldiers at about this time, but attacks on the Yoruba continued. And the corps still existed 20 years later, when the kingdom at last found itself caught up in the “scramble for Africa,” which saw various European powers competing to absorb slices of the continent into their empires. Dahomey fell within the French sphere of influence, and there was already a small French colony at Porto-Novo when, in about 1889, female troops were involved in an incident that resulted in a full-scale war. According to local oral histories, the spark came when the Dahomeans attacked a village under French suzerainty whose chief tried to avert panic by assuring the inhabitants that the tricolor would protect them. “So you like this flag?” the Dahomean general asked when the settlement had been overrun. “Eh bien, it will serve you.” At the general’s signal, one of the women warriors beheaded the chief with one blow of her cutlass and carried his head back to her new king, Béhanzin, wrapped in the French standard. The First Franco-Dahomean War, which ensued in 1890, resulted in two major battles, one of which took place in heavy rain at dawn outside Cotonou, on the Bight of Benin. Béhanzin’s army, which included female units, assaulted a French stockade but was driven back in hand-to-hand fighting. No quarter was given on either side, and Jean Bayol saw his chief gunner decapitated by a fighter he recognized as Nanisca, the young woman he had met three months earlier in Abomey as she executed a prisoner. Only the sheer firepower of their modern rifles won the day for the French, and in the battle’s aftermath Bayol found Nanisca lying dead. “The cleaver, with its curved blade, engraved with fetish symbols, was attached to her left wrist by a small cord,” he wrote, “and her right hand was clenched around the barrel of her carbine covered with cowries.” In the uneasy peace that followed, Béhanzin did his best to equip his army with more modern weapons, but the Dahomeans were still no match for the large French force that was assembled to complete the conquest two years later. That seven-week war was fought even more fiercely than the first. There were 23 separate battles, and once again female troops were in the vanguard of Béhanzin’s forces. The women were the last to surrender, and even then—at least according to a rumor common in the French army of occupation—the survivors took their revenge on the French by covertly substituting themselves for Dahomean women who were taken into the enemy stockade. Each allowed herself to be seduced by French officer, waited for him to fall asleep, and then cut his throat with his own bayonet. A group of women warriors in traditional dress. Picture: Wikicommons. Their last enemies were full of praise for their courage. A French Foreign Legionnaire named Bern lauded them as “warrioresses… fight with extreme valor, always ahead of the other troops. They are outstandingly brave … well trained for combat and very disciplined.” A French Marine, Henri Morienval, thought them “remarkable for their courage and their ferocity… flung themselves on our bayonets with prodigious bravery.” Most sources suggest that the last of Dahomey’s women warriors died in the 1940s, but Stanley Alpern disputes this. Pointing out that “a woman who had fought the French in her teens would have been no older than 69 in 1943,” he suggests, more pleasingly, that it is likely one or more survived long enough to see her country regain its independence in 1960. As late as 1978, a Beninese historian encountered an extremely old woman in the village of Kinta who convincingly claimed to have fought against the French in 1892. Her name was Nawi, and she died, aged well over 100, in November 1979. Probably she was the last. What were they like, these scattered survivors of a storied regiment? Some proud but impoverished, it seems; others married; a few tough and argumentative, well capable, Alpern says, of “beating up men who dared to affront them.” And at least one of them still traumatized by her service, a reminder that some military experiences are universal. A Dahomean who grew up in Cotonou in the 1930s recalled that he regularly tormented an elderly woman he and his friends saw shuffling along the road, bent double by tiredness and age. He confided to the French writer Hélène Almeida- Topor that one day, one of us throws a stone that hits another stone. The noise resounds, a spark flies. We suddenly see the old woman straighten up. Her face is transfigured. She begins to march proudly… Reaching a wall, she lies down on her belly and crawls on her elbows to get round it. She thinks she is holding a rifle because abruptly she shoulders and fires, then reloads her imaginary arm and fires again, imitating the sound of a salvo. Then she leaps, pounces on an imaginary enemy, rolls on the ground in furious hand-t0-hand combat, flattens the foe. With one hand she seems to pin him to the ground, and with the other stabs him repeatedly. Her cries betray her effort. She makes the gesture of cutting to the quick and stands up brandishing her trophy…. Female officers pictured in 1851, wearing symbolic horns of office on their heads. She intones a song of victory and dances: The blood flows, You are dead. The blood flows, We have won. The blood flows, it flows, it flows. The blood flows, The enemy is no more. But suddenly she stops, dazed. Her body bends, hunches, How old she seems, older than before! She walks away with a hesitant step. She is a former warrior, an adult explains…. The battles ended years ago, but she continues the war in her head. Sources Hélène Almeida-Topor. Les Amazones: Une Armée de Femmes dans l’Afrique Précoloniale. Paris: Editions Rochevignes, 1984; Stanley Alpern. Amazons of Black Sparta: The Women Warriors of Dahomey. London: C. Hurst & Co., 2011; Richard Burton. A Mission to Gelele, King of Dahome. London: RKP, 1966; Robin Law. ‘The ‘Amazons’ of Dahomey.’ Paideuma 39 (1993); J.A. Skertchley. Dahomey As It Is: Being a Narrative of Eight Months’ Residence in that Country, with a Full Account of the Notorious Annual Customs… London: Chapman & Hall, 1874. Ordinary copy and paste...... Fool |
Christianity Etc › Re: COZA Member Reacts To Pastor's New Porsche by ZiggyMr(m): 7:27pm On Jan 29, 2017 |
Vivy: They now have a branch in Port Harcourt Dear Vivy, I appreciate ur enlightment, but be remimded that as at when i wrote that Coza Ph was still a project in the pipeline. Coza Ph started not quite long like middle of last year and it was my resident pastor here in ilorin that was transfered to ph. I celebrate u. |
NYSC › Re: Man Wearing NYSC Outfit In USA Pictured by ZiggyMr(m): 8:59pm On Jan 25, 2017 |
He's looking for ppa in yankee |
Sports › Re: Alex Iwobi And His Pretty Girlfriend Join Arsenal Stars For Event In London.PICS by ZiggyMr(m): 5:47pm On Dec 15, 2016 |
Giroud and Xhaka on point..... oh no Elneny. |
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Romance › Re: My Friend Brought A Prostitute To My House by ZiggyMr(m): 5:14pm On Nov 29, 2016 |
AntiWailer: You are not responsible my brother.
Just like your friend.

No be joke oo. Na joke I mean. deturla, show me ur friend and i ll knw who you are. you are not responsible, no be lie. the olosho for break ur head. when next you see ur friend rake for am well. |
NYSC › Re: Zamfara Nysc Camp Raided By Robbers Over night. by ZiggyMr(m): 9:35pm On Nov 25, 2016 |
Tsafe: I doubt dis news, even wen the schl adjacent the camp was male hostel dem no rob us. Zm camp sweet jare Batch C 2011 guys ll attest to that. |
Education › Re: Check Out This Two-seater Tricycle (KEKE) Constructed By A FUTA Student by ZiggyMr(m): 11:20pm On Nov 11, 2016 |
Obakekere-obanla tins |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 10:12am On Nov 10, 2016 |
Pls house i need lagos consulate address. |
Politics › Re: Untold Story Of SSS Raids On Judges’ Homes In Abuja, Six States by ZiggyMr(m): 7:18pm On Oct 08, 2016 |
waow!!! thats massive $400,000 and 39m in cash...... |
Education › Re: SSANU, NASU Protest Against Vice-chancellor In FUTA by ZiggyMr(m): 6:53am On Oct 08, 2016 |
What is my alma mata turning to, Futa needs another Prof Adeniyi. |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 4:33pm On Sep 27, 2016 |
hello guys, can i use a prepaid envelope which has abuja embassy address as sender address at lagos consulate office. |
Celebrities › Re: Professor Peller - The Enchanting Story Of Nigeria Most Famous Magician! by ZiggyMr(m): 2:52pm On Sep 24, 2016 |
ishadfurnitures: He was killed in his oluwo nla Bodija ibadan residence not onipanu lagos. That was d story i heard too |
Celebrities › Re: Professor Peller - The Enchanting Story Of Nigeria Most Famous Magician! by ZiggyMr(m): 2:48pm On Sep 24, 2016 |
AntiWailer: Yes you are right, he killed himself by revealing how he can be killed on one useless program on TV.
On the show hosted by Gboyega Lawal called "On rosy ni galaxy" A show on Galaxy television Ibadan in the 90s
Peller revealed how he respects God and always disarm when praying (moslem prayers).
The stupid host ask that it is not possible to disarm completely and he replied that he disarm completely and even bring out anytin he swallowed so as to honor God.
I watched the program live and was not comfortable too after that revelation.
Guess what ! He was killed while praying.
That is one of the reasons I made up my mind not to grant senseless interview and my dislike for journalists still there till tommorow. Lol... Guy u don tey for ibadan o rosy ni galaxy o rosy ni galaxy, galaxy la wa yii oo He don tey o |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 9:03am On Sep 21, 2016 |
ple who knws the embassy address in abuja that i will put on my courier envelope, am planning to send my db form thru abuja embassy. |
Travel › Re: The Journey Of A Photoblogger Into The Slum Of Ilaje-Bariga Lagos by ZiggyMr(m): 10:37am On Sep 17, 2016 |
Kudos, my friend an insighting post u have there..... |
Business › Re: Onitsha Shoprite Idles Away by ZiggyMr(m): 11:53am On Aug 19, 2016 |
YonkijiSappo: The richest city in Africa can't even keep a single shoprite branch outlet Afloat? LMAO Even the ones in Akure, Ibadan and Ilorin are thriving, not to mention the numerous outlets in Lagos. I always tell Nigerians, Igbos are more into informal and unregistered economy. Any attempt to bring regulation, formalisation and order to any Igbo dominated venture or towns , and only two things can happen:
*- Such effort will fail woefully, and they will continue with their "wuruwuru"/clandestine trading style. *- The so called rich businessman will suddenly become poorer than a church rat. ibadan even has 2shoprite |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 7:35am On Aug 19, 2016 |
stharrie: It's best to buy before Monday,because the FedEx office might bot have international flyers that morning Like it happened to me. And to save time and stress it.s best you get your envelope before Monday How much does the envelope cost? |
Politics › Re: Ondo Elections: Yoruba Muslims Threaten Political Revolt by ZiggyMr(m): 12:23pm On Aug 18, 2016 |
abdulwastecx: I am from ikare akoko, ikare is 90% Muslim, oga ago is majority Muslim.... Akoko in general have majority Muslim. Owo is 60% Muslim, lots of ebira settlers, ondo town has considerable high Muslim population. Muslim me up more 35% of ondo state population my friend am not against muslim we are just chatting here ok. i wont accept owo been 60% muslim we can deduce from here, how many notable owo indigenes do you know that are muslims? you said many ebira settlers my question is can these set of people contest for gubernatorial seat or are indigenes of ondo town? we are talking of ondo state or ondo town people that are muslims i.e am not saying there are no muslims but compare the population of muslims to that of christians. |
Politics › Re: Ondo Elections: Yoruba Muslims Threaten Political Revolt by ZiggyMr(m): 10:34am On Aug 17, 2016 |
onnenka: Are saying saying the muslim population in Ondo is higher? dustmalik, pls go and do your research the only area that has high concentration of muslims is around ikare/akoko, i cant realy remember the area. when you talk about other places like akure you ll understand that muslims are very low in population. how many big mosque do you know in akure apart from the one at oja oba? |
Politics › Re: Donald Trump Blasts Nigeria Again!! - (A Joke) by ZiggyMr(m): 10:06am On Aug 17, 2016 |
kennycalls: they should go to Nigeria. There, there is even no reality to connect with. Everything is unreal. The cleaner, the dirtier. Biggest economy in Africa, worst case of suffering. That is why I am shouting. We must save America. There won’t be a third term for Obama through Hillary.... NOTHING COULD BE FARTHER FROM THE TRUTH... DONALD TRUMP....THE MOURINHO OF AMERICAN POLITICS. but come to think of it, the guy said the truth about this country but we think he his only insulting us. i wont deny the fact that he has diahorrea of the mouth but he doesnt shy away from the truth. |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 9:41am On Aug 17, 2016 |
Hello guys, do i stand a chance of getting my db account opened after i got a rejection mail last week am trying to increase the balance on my account statement but as at now am still stuck on 2.5m and my new appointment date is 29th of august while my interview is on 30th. |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 12:58pm On Aug 11, 2016 |
[quote author=royalflyness post=48387321]I feel you should not wait till that 30th which is your interview, consider the fact that DB takes a long time to give you details and the time it's gona take u to fund dat account.. . act now; so you get ur details close to dat time ure going for interview or a few days after ur interview.. [/quote thanks man, i appreciate |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 10:19am On Aug 11, 2016 |
duccious: I gt dsame mail too. The thing is not funny at all. so what do you think we should do? someone told me on my scheduled day of interview(30.  i shud apply for db account opening again using the new form and statement of account as evidence of source for funding. this thing they pain me o and my enrolment deadline is just around the corner. |
Travel › Re: General German Visa Enquiries Part 3 by ZiggyMr(m): 9:31am On Aug 11, 2016 |
Hello house, i just got a mail that my db account could not be opened that i used an outdated form, that if i am still interested i should send the correct form. pls i dont knw hw to go about that, can anybody help a bro |
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