NewStats: 3,262,109 , 8,176,094 topics. Date: Saturday, 31 May 2025 at 07:36 PM 5mc1u6z3e3g |
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Power of make up no be here. I be looking like
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So Police found Innoson guilty of forging documents worth millions to fraudulently clear his goods and just let him walk free, not just that: allowed him to enter a negotiation with gt bank? What kinda country are we in? That people commit such criminal acts and still walk free ![]() 1 Like |
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ERockson: Goes to show you don't even know Nigeria. The land mass of Niger state alone is as big as the entire South East. Just when has truth become an insult? |
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Op There's this thing with all Adichies books that I've read, from purple hibiscus to half of a yellow sun and Americana. They never end well. She leaves u with a lump under ur throat, u forever keep wondering what happened next, always one mystery that remains unraveled and u hear wishing to see to be continued at the last page but it's sadly the end. I think Alicia needs to learn how to end her stories better. 1 Like |
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ItsMeAboki: Don't digress, u were talking about ancestory. If u dont know what ancestors are, check the dictionary, its not my job to explain to u. Settlers can claim ancestry, certainly not er bys. |
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ItsMeAboki: How do er bys begin to claim ancestry to a land they never settled on. Never buried any of their relatives, never set any traditional stool to build their interest, never contested or voted in any elections, paid homage to the locals as the real land owners. I find ur logic flawed. 2 Likes |
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ioranum: thank u |
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munas: Exactly, You've thrown the light urself. The fish curves in the burrowed soil with it's tail inside its mouth occasionally chewing on the tail till the rains resume. Some peeps forbid eating the fish as they accuse it of feeding on itself. 1 Like |
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Qmerit: Yea... Frogs, real Frogs. |
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"Ifiam" - Frog in english. A serious delicacy in these parts
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It takes patience to drive through these paths....
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"Gbaver" - a specie of fish that cysts in the dry season waiting for rains being smoked.
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A disturbing trend: cutting down of economic trees like he palm trees. Since hay is hard to find now, herdsmen cut down tree branches for the cattle the feed. The palm trees are not spared.
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My friend in a pose with one of the herdsmen
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Today we took another trip to one of the occupied areas. The herd here is almost like double the one we earlier saw
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For clarity sake, Melaye only have a statement of result from ABU. u guys stop mentioning certificate already cos he does not have one. What we should be asking ourselves is y he's still using a mere statement of result instead of a proper cert. |
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I don't get. Melaye was supposed to graduate in 1999 but had carry overs and hence spilled. Does it mean he was able to resit his carry over courses within the same year, clear them and got mobilized within the year? For this Naija? Was ABU operating at lightening speed as recent as '99? 2 Likes |
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ComrdDRS: Toh, na to follow the guy jejeli until him back reach wall na. Shey he's already done with his questions 18 Likes 2 Shares |
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Hmmm ortom rocking addidas his p.a rocking nike..... designers on flick whilst the people roast |
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Vast Plane land
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SalamRushdie: LOL.... 22 Likes 1 Share |
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EazyMoh: Did u read the post at all? Part of the report is what my guide told me and I quoted him accordingly. U might as well have asked if I saw the big men who own the cattle there. 71 Likes 5 Shares |
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EazyMoh: I will need a life insurance policy to see them lol. That'll require me to be in the battle field when crisis start. 29 Likes 3 Shares |
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EazyMoh: Like I said in the post, there is a militia wing that launches attack when the need arises. The nomadic herds men don't wield guns. 34 Likes 3 Shares |
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more pics
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WizBLANCE:
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HungerBAD: Ok, will try |
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HungerBAD:Haba, taking a week holiday to a place like Obudu Cattle Ranch won't hurt na 3 Likes |
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So today, in the heat of the Fulani killings in Buruku, my busy body took me into the deep of Gwer West. We all know the sorry state of the road from Makurdi to Naka (that one is story for another day). The road from Naka to Agagbe and a little beyond is very motor able due to on going constructions. Our expedition finally took us to a destination we could no longer drive. We parked and did the rest of the journey on foot. I must confess I have never seen plain, arable land so vast (Benue is richly blessed), I could see as far as my eyes could take me, save for some few tractors that ploughed the soil and a pocket of young men and women who followed behind in search of “Gbaver” or “Akee” - a species of fish that cysts in the dry season . I also have never seen so many herds of cattle like I did today, white colors from far and near with dust from their movement renting the air, moving in different directions one wonders where they are headed. I completely lost count of how many times our vehicle had to park for the herds men to clear the way so we could . To get the clear picture, we trekked to the border of Gwer West with Agatu, crossing a stream whose bridge was just a log of wood laid across. While we were contemplating whether to attempt crossing (I come dey wonder who send me), our guide was already at the middle of the log drinking still, murky water from the stream (these guys strong sha). They told us the Agatus have decided to fight a “cold war” with the fulanis, they’ve refused to sell food items, water, medicine, cigarettes, drinks and any other thing a Fulani man will need to survive, that in fact trade between the Agatus and fulanis is at absolute zero, leaving the fulanis no choice but to move towards Tyoshin. I also learnt from our guide that there are 3 different layers of Fulani: the big men who own the cattle, the nomadic herds men who move the cattle from one place to another in search of pasture and the militia wing which launch attacks when the need arises. One thing that surprised me however was the level of peaceful cohabitation between the Tivs and the Fulanis. One of the men I talked to told me he left his village settlement to set up a makeshift camp so he could carry out hunting activities together with other hunters. He showed the” Kpiam” (Gazelle in English I guess) they killed yesterday smoking under charcoal. Right there beside these camps were herds of cattle littering the surroundings as can be seen in the video (I begin dey wonder which kain liver these men get). He told me the last time they (Tiv and Fulani) fought, there were lots of deaths, schools were burnt down and their kids could no longer go to school, worst of all; there was hunger and their means to livelihood was cut off since they could no longer farm, leaving them no choice than to live at peace with the fulanis. Now as I’m back to the comfort of “City life”, typing while my feet aches from blisters, I can imagine those hunters in their make shift camps, exposed to the elements (I no see any mosquito net for there self), with unwanted neighbors (Fulanis) who have forced themselves on them. It makes me wonder if in the long run, this forced cohabitation is the panacea to peaceful coexistence or the Tivs there are just sitting on another time bomb waiting to explode. 5 Likes 2 Shares |
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Yet we keep complaining all the jobs go to the north. It is now clear from this analysis that the north is marginalized. 5 Likes |
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of all the points, no 6. is more important.
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