@GossipMillNaija Paid protest. Seyi makinde hide them bcos of his ambition? Does that even make sense? Some Nigerians don't have conscience sha. they can engage themselves in anything so far it involves money.
@ChuksEricE Some of the nothern governors are so daft, they have nothing up upstairs. The same tactics u have adopted that haven't yielded any positive results.
@engrICO2015 She was paid to tutor her not to serve her as she said. If she comes late, that's her problem. Whenever the agreed period comes to an end, she must leave irrespective of whatever she was able to grab during her training.
Good news: Dr. Iheukwumere Ikechukwu of the Department of Microbiology at COOU has been sacked by the Governing Council of Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University.
He sexually abused students and engaged in different forms of misconduct.
Four other academic staff members were also sacked, including two professors.
We are restoring integrity in our universities, which will in turn improve the quality of our graduates.
Dear South Africans,
Remember we did this for you and today you hurt Nigerians
Is this how to appreciate those that suffered for your freedom
οΏΌ
In 1976, Nigeria established the Southern Africa Relief Fund (SARF) to support anti-apartheid liberation struggles. Under the military administration of General Olusegun Obasanjo, all Nigerian civil servants and public officers were mandated to contribute 2% of their monthly salaries to the fund, which became popularly known as the "Mandela Tax". [1, 2]
The grassroots and public initiative was highly successful: [1, 2]
β’Initial Government Support: General Obasanjo's administration contributed $3.7 million to SARF, alongside personal donations of $3,000 from the General himself and $1,500 from each cabinet member. [1]
β’Public Participation: Civil servants forfeited 2% of their salaries, and students actively skipped lunches to donate their allowances. [1]
β’Fundraising Milestone: In just six months, popular contributions reached $10.5 million by June 1977.[1]
β’Broader Aid: These funds were utilized to bring relief to victims of the apartheid regime, finance educational opportunities, and support the general welfare of liberation movements. This contribution was part of an estimated $61 billion that Nigeria spent between 1960 and 1995 toward the anti-apartheid struggle. [1, 2, 3]
@Vxebo_ Is that how to demand accountability ? By beating and embarrassing immigrants u now refer to as ur fellow african brothers.
Una never see anything .
@ReshadRahman@RogerTorello I just hope we are not depending on this guy to lead the attack next season cos mourinho will show us 'shege' . They are signing experienced players, we want to depend on mediocre
@ReshadRahman@RogerTorello I just hope we are not depending on this guy to lead the attack next season cos mourinho will show us 'shege' . They are signing experienced players, we want to depend on mediocre