Without sly or cunning intelligence but an intense desire for winning, fine dining, world travel, intelligent & sensational conversations. Views ‘re personal.
Airlines should, please, ensure to let passengers know the true reasons for lengthy delays, especially when it is a fuelling issue. Do not keep people waiting in false hopes from morning until late night, only to either cancel or fly at an hour where safety at destination city is not guaranteed.
Everybody is affected by this avoidable situation; top government officials. Visa interview applicants. Students. Business people. Etc.
The DGCA, Capt. Chris Najomo, has expressed concerns about this and ordered enhanced monitoring of flight operations by the CPOs.
The challenges may not be the fault of the airlines sometimes, but it is the responsibility of the operator to mitigate the inconvenience of paying passengers by letting them make the choice to book another flight to prevent missing out on extremely important events. This is a no-brainer. Do not say, "Bird strike" if the problem is fuel. Do not say, "We will take off in 30 minutes," if you are not sure of fuelling. Do not announce a 20 minute delay if operating aircraft is not on ground and has no ETA yet.
If you keep passengers up to 10pm, provide them HOTAC.
You don’t want to be rich so you can buy g wagons & flex jet photos.
You want to be rich so you can sit on your porch with a coffee for slow mornings.
So you can go to the gym middle of the day.
Take long walks and call them meetings.
Never miss a single family moment. That is being rich, and it has nothing to do with buying things to impress strangers.
Let me give you my vision:
A man's right to work as he will, to spend what he earns, to own property, to have the state as servant and not as master—these are the British inheritance. They are the essence of a free economy, and on that freedom all our other freedoms depend.
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo at #AAM2025:
“African Renaissance in an Era of Turbulence- Are the Lions Still on the Move?”
His message was clear: Africa’s future is still in motion -bold, proud, and unshaken.
📍Abuja | 🗓️ 25–28 June
#AAM2025#AfricanRenaissance#Obasanjo #AfricaForward #TradeAndTransformation #OneContinentOneFuture
#don’tburntheirfuture
This campaign is started by the @fccpcnigeria to curb underage access to tobacco and secondhand smoke.
I am glad it is getting the attention it deserves. Let’s join hands to protect our vulnerable kids.
@IrohUzoigwe@FinPlanKaluAja1 Fines are a matter of law, regulatory certainty and transparency. Please read the investigative report on the FCCPC website to learn more about how the fines were calculated. In this instance, the fine was corrective not punitive.
@POTFRNG If you seek transparency, I recommend reviewing the investigative report, as continuing this discussion without that context is quite unproductive for both of us. If u're inclined to be more knowledgeable I suggest visiting the FCCPC website for the investigative report
@ENIBOY It's curious why the narrative is on penalties instead of the actual behavior. What is the purpose of the fine? Shouldn't the narrative be about improving conduct and obeying law, rather than exit? Essentially,Meta is saying 'Let us do anyhow or we exit
@EfeOdafeU@instablog9ja It's curious why the narrative is on penalties instead of the actual behavior. What is the purpose of the fine? Shouldn't the narrative be about improving conduct and obeying law, rather than exit? Essentially,Meta is saying 'Let us do anyhow or we exit
@Delitejournal It's curious why the narrative is on penalties instead of the actual behavior. What is the purpose of the fine? Shouldn't the narrative be about improving conduct and obey law, rather than exit? Essentially,Meta says 'Let us do anyhow or we exit
Exactly! This is the question. It's curious why the narrative is on penalties instead of the actual behavior. What is the purpose of the fine? Shouldn't the narrative be about improving conduct and obey law, rather than exit? Essentially,Meta is says 'Let us do anyhow or we exit
Meta has threatened to shut down Facebook and Instagram services in Nigeria over $290 million fines by the FCCPC and what it calls "unrealistic" regulatory demands from Naija authorities. What is unrealistic there? Is it cos this is Africa? Why pay the fines in other countries?
@POTFRNG@NigeriaStories Isn't it amusing how you discuss fixing the digital ecosystem while also mentioning Meta's exit? Oga stand one side. By the way, addressing this ecosystem includes enforcing the Nigerian Data Protection Regulation that Meta hasn't complied with, read the report.
I must appreciate you Sir as a leader that keeps on giving, your His legal representation was stellar!
The Tribunal's decision to affirm the findings of the FCCPC is a significant milestone not just for Nigeria, but for the entire African continent;
Cheers to the FCCPC and Investigative Panel our efforts are paving the way for a more equitable and just data protection framework, benefiting not only Nigeria but all of Africa.