well am ezekiel,am from lagos,am writting just to make u my friends in this group mostly u male folks,pls try as much as u cn to love and be real to just dat one woman,u cn not love u woman at d same time...
there is no crime in loving one woman,there is no same in letting dat one woman who cares about know how u truely feel about her,sex,money is not and will noit be the most important things u want in dat babe....
hope to meet and know u all,God bless u as u read this,halla me u all at ziki7@yahoo.com,or 080-2947-3306,bye for now
=== Original Message ===>>>>what are u actually saying boy. That women are taking ride easily. See, if a man loves his woman....he really loves her not for anything as u said....just for been her. got that!!!!
well am ezekiel,am from lagos,am writting just to make u my friends in this group mostly u male folks,pls try as much as u cn to love and be real to just dat one woman,u cn not love u woman at d same time...
there is no crime in loving one woman,there is no same in letting dat one woman who cares about know how u truely feel about her,sex,money is not and will noit be the most important things u want in dat babe....
hope to meet and know u all,God bless u as u read this,halla me u all at ziki7@yahoo.com,or 080-2947-3306,bye for now
Liberty decays in a society where everything is permitted and nothing is prohibited, the issue of corruption in our dear Country Nigeria is growing at an enormous rate that if care is not taking, we might not find an antidote for it. When President Olusegun Obasanjo took office in 1999, ending more than 15 years of corrupt and often brutal military rule, he declared it was the end of Corruption that has taken a permanent features in our day to day activities he declared that corruption was a cancer that had debilitated the Nigerian state and frustrated development efforts, despite the country's huge oil riches. It was, therefore, an enemy to be fought until it retreated.
Despite all the precautions that baba Iyabo is injecting into the system to ensure fairness and transparency we can still see some handy work of saboteurs are trying to frustrate what baba Iyabo is doing. Although from the foreground, it is luminously evident that corruption is not peculiar to Nigeria, but it is a viable enterprise in the society. But the situation in the society is complicated because the system does not have the apparatus to trace and prosecute the big politicians that engage in grand thefts. Thus, greed and the brazen display of wealth by public officials, which they are unable to account for, points to the fact that those in power are to blame more for corruption than the common people who are often pushed into corrupt behavior in their struggle for survival.
While Nigeria may not have a reputation for being a litigious society, the Constitution contemplated that elected officials may be so bogged down by frivolous litigation that it becomes impossible for them to do the work they were elected to do.
Unfortunately, this provision, which was meant to protect elected officials, has become an audacious agent for corrupt politicians thereby raising the level of corruption in the country to unprecedented levels. We see Ministers diverting government money into their private account, Governors ignoring construction work claiming is Federal government road or project but when it comes to stealing money, it's not government money.... even in our Universities we see SUG's student fighting over money that is not theirs and many who took public funds are living large in abroad as some of the wealthiest people in the world. The thinking being that if this is the way to share the proverbial national cake, and then our people must partake in it.
Nigeria is the sixth largest producer of crude oil in the world. It is also a leading exporter of natural gas. Ordinarily Nigeria and Nigerians should be among the richest nations and individuals in the world.
However, due to criminal mismanagement of the economy, our people rank amongst the poorest in the world. We go, cap in hand, begging international donors for aid and financial institutions for debt forgiveness. Nigeria's public hospitals are not much different from when it was called "mere consulting clinics" by a military politician. Youths, who graduate from the various institutions of learning, roam the streets, as there are no jobs to engage them. The result of that has been increase in violent crimes, including thuggery and armed robbery
Our educated young women are sometimes forced to sell their bodies as means to make ends meet. It is hard to recall when our universities and other colleges completed a full year of academic activity without disruptions from strikes by staffers.
If one may ask, who is to blame for the prevalence of corrupt activities in the society? Is it the common person or those in power? No matter who the culprits are, convention dictates that to effectively tackle a problem one should first and foremost determine and understand the cause (s) -why it happens, before one could effectively manage the effect (s) -what happens as a result. Similarly, to effectively control corruption in Nigeria it is pertinent to understand the cause (s) before looking for ways to mange it.
Nevertheless, given all this baggage, is it possible for Nigeria to ameliorate the effects of corruption? Currently, the remedies for corruption in the society are not working, and the inability of the leaders to report on the effectiveness, or otherwise, of the nations anti-corruption strategies make apparent the war on corruption a joke
Liberty decays in a society where everything is permitted and nothing is prohibited, the issue of corruption in our dear Country Nigeria is growing at an enormous rate that if care is not taking, we might not find an antidote for it. When President Olusegun Obasanjo took office in 1999, ending more than 15 years of corrupt and often brutal military rule, he declared it was the end of Corruption that has taken a permanent features in our day to day activities he declared that corruption was a cancer that had debilitated the Nigerian state and frustrated development efforts, despite the country's huge oil riches. It was, therefore, an enemy to be fought until it retreated.
Despite all the precautions that baba Iyabo is injecting into the system to ensure fairness and transparency we can still see some handy work of saboteurs are trying to frustrate what baba Iyabo is doing. Although from the foreground, it is luminously evident that corruption is not peculiar to Nigeria, but it is a viable enterprise in the society. But the situation in the society is complicated because the system does not have the apparatus to trace and prosecute the big politicians that engage in grand thefts. Thus, greed and the brazen display of wealth by public officials, which they are unable to account for, points to the fact that those in power are to blame more for corruption than the common people who are often pushed into corrupt behavior in their struggle for survival.
While Nigeria may not have a reputation for being a litigious society, the Constitution contemplated that elected officials may be so bogged down by frivolous litigation that it becomes impossible for them to do the work they were elected to do.
Unfortunately, this provision, which was meant to protect elected officials, has become an audacious agent for corrupt politicians thereby raising the level of corruption in the country to unprecedented levels. We see Ministers diverting government money into their private account, Governors ignoring construction work claiming is Federal government road or project but when it comes to stealing money, it's not government money.... even in our Universities we see SUG's student fighting over money that is not theirs and many who took public funds are living large in abroad as some of the wealthiest people in the world. The thinking being that if this is the way to share the proverbial national cake, and then our people must partake in it.
Nigeria is the sixth largest producer of crude oil in the world. It is also a leading exporter of natural gas. Ordinarily Nigeria and Nigerians should be among the richest nations and individuals in the world.
However, due to criminal mismanagement of the economy, our people rank amongst the poorest in the world. We go, cap in hand, begging international donors for aid and financial institutions for debt forgiveness. Nigeria's public hospitals are not much different from when it was called "mere consulting clinics" by a military politician. Youths, who graduate from the various institutions of learning, roam the streets, as there are no jobs to engage them. The result of that has been increase in violent crimes, including thuggery and armed robbery
Our educated young women are sometimes forced to sell their bodies as means to make ends meet. It is hard to recall when our universities and other colleges completed a full year of academic activity without disruptions from strikes by staffers.
If one may ask, who is to blame for the prevalence of corrupt activities in the society? Is it the common person or those in power? No matter who the culprits are, convention dictates that to effectively tackle a problem one should first and foremost determine and understand the cause (s) -why it happens, before one could effectively manage the effect (s) -what happens as a result. Similarly, to effectively control corruption in Nigeria it is pertinent to understand the cause (s) before looking for ways to mange it.
Nevertheless, given all this baggage, is it possible for Nigeria to ameliorate the effects of corruption? Currently, the remedies for corruption in the society are not working, and the inability of the leaders to report on the effectiveness, or otherwise, of the nations anti-corruption strategies make apparent the war on corruption a joke
Liberty decays in a society where everything is permitted and nothing is prohibited, the issue of corruption in our dear Country Nigeria is growing at an enormous rate that if care is not taking, we might not find an antidote for it. When President Olusegun Obasanjo took office in 1999, ending more than 15 years of corrupt and often brutal military rule, he declared it was the end of Corruption that has taken a permanent features in our day to day activities he declared that corruption was a cancer that had debilitated the Nigerian state and frustrated development efforts, despite the country's huge oil riches. It was, therefore, an enemy to be fought until it retreated.
Despite all the precautions that baba Iyabo is injecting into the system to ensure fairness and transparency we can still see some handy work of saboteurs are trying to frustrate what baba Iyabo is doing. Although from the foreground, it is luminously evident that corruption is not peculiar to Nigeria, but it is a viable enterprise in the society. But the situation in the society is complicated because the system does not have the apparatus to trace and prosecute the big politicians that engage in grand thefts. Thus, greed and the brazen display of wealth by public officials, which they are unable to account for, points to the fact that those in power are to blame more for corruption than the common people who are often pushed into corrupt behavior in their struggle for survival.
While Nigeria may not have a reputation for being a litigious society, the Constitution contemplated that elected officials may be so bogged down by frivolous litigation that it becomes impossible for them to do the work they were elected to do.
Unfortunately, this provision, which was meant to protect elected officials, has become an audacious agent for corrupt politicians thereby raising the level of corruption in the country to unprecedented levels. We see Ministers diverting government money into their private account, Governors ignoring construction work claiming is Federal government road or project but when it comes to stealing money, it's not government money.... even in our Universities we see SUG's student fighting over money that is not theirs and many who took public funds are living large in abroad as some of the wealthiest people in the world. The thinking being that if this is the way to share the proverbial national cake, and then our people must partake in it.
Nigeria is the sixth largest producer of crude oil in the world. It is also a leading exporter of natural gas. Ordinarily Nigeria and Nigerians should be among the richest nations and individuals in the world.
However, due to criminal mismanagement of the economy, our people rank amongst the poorest in the world. We go, cap in hand, begging international donors for aid and financial institutions for debt forgiveness. Nigeria's public hospitals are not much different from when it was called "mere consulting clinics" by a military politician. Youths, who graduate from the various institutions of learning, roam the streets, as there are no jobs to engage them. The result of that has been increase in violent crimes, including thuggery and armed robbery
Our educated young women are sometimes forced to sell their bodies as means to make ends meet. It is hard to recall when our universities and other colleges completed a full year of academic activity without disruptions from strikes by staffers.
If one may ask, who is to blame for the prevalence of corrupt activities in the society? Is it the common person or those in power? No matter who the culprits are, convention dictates that to effectively tackle a problem one should first and foremost determine and understand the cause (s) -why it happens, before one could effectively manage the effect (s) -what happens as a result. Similarly, to effectively control corruption in Nigeria it is pertinent to understand the cause (s) before looking for ways to mange it.
Nevertheless, given all this baggage, is it possible for Nigeria to ameliorate the effects of corruption? Currently, the remedies for corruption in the society are not working, and the inability of the leaders to report on the effectiveness, or otherwise, of the nations anti-corruption strategies make apparent the war on corruption a joke