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Phones / Re: Woman Refuses To Remove Hijab For MTN Registration (pics) by dubai92(f): 1:45pm On Jan 20, 2016
dre11:





http://dailypost.ng/2016/01/20/drama-as-woman-refuses-to-remove-hijab-for-mtn-registration/


evn with their educations, dis muslim pple are too troublesome.....it takes a muslim to b extra exposed b4 dey mingle.. imagine say na 1 ph gal wear boom short com dat plce n they ask her to wear a wrapper n she says dis is hw we dress in my plce. All d muslim go stone her die dat day.. mtchewwww

5 Likes 1 Share

Politics / Re: Kaduna State Unveils Its New Logo (Photo) by dubai92(f): 8:51am On Oct 18, 2015
TonyeBarcanista:
Kaduna is blessed!!
notin lyk blessed ooo. Dis man is jst doin his gara-gara.. we dnt ave lyt more dan a mnth in my hood... n we are nt fear frm govtmnt house.... dis is nt d chng we voted for
Celebrities / Re: Linda Ikeji Inside Her New House - Photo by dubai92(f): 8:39am On Oct 18, 2015
agarawu23:
Big mansion without a husband is shiit. Don't let hypocrites deceive you.

Go and marry undecided

850m on a mansion and you want good guys to ask you out?
so whn u ave moni, u shuldnt spnd cus ure lookin for a husband. .... ur tots are so poor
Politics / Re: Ambode, Oshiomhole At David Lawal's Thanskgiving Service In Abuja (Pics) by dubai92(f): 8:26am On Oct 18, 2015
dainformant:
Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos, gov Adams Oshiomhole and his pretty wife Lara and other dignitaries at the Thanksgiving Service and reception for engineer Babachir David Lawal as secretary to the Government of the Federation in Abuja........

http://www.nationalhelm.com/2015/10/photos-ambode-oshiomhole-and-other.html
dis lady sef, is she d New VG in Edo? She is jst all over dis man evrywhere undecided
Celebrities / Re: Nigerian Female Celebrities & Their Body Tattoos(photos) by dubai92(f): 1:49pm On Sep 28, 2015
dearsly:
Hoes of the same feathers.....

Buh on the other hand,de stuff d pay their bills...

Minding my business will do me more good...

*_*
it men lyk u dat get to marry women dat will kill u.. whn has tattoos qualify woman as hoe? In d 1800's woman had tattoos becus if nt as fyn as our generation we say it as normal. .
Religion / Re: Church General Overseer Converts To Muslim And Gives Reasons by dubai92(f): 5:26pm On Aug 03, 2015
madridguy:
Surah Nasr comes to my mind :

Bismillah Ar-Rahman Ar-Raheem
Idha ja a nasr Ullahi wa-l-fathu
Wa ra'ait an-nasa yadkhuluna fi din-Illahi afwaja
Fa-sabbih bi-hamdi Rabbi-ka wa-staghfir-hu
Inna-hu kana tawwaba

In the name of Allah, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.
When Allah's succour and the triumph cometh
And thou seest mankind entering the religion of Allah in troops,
Then hymn the praises of thy Lord, and seek forgiveness of Him. Lo! He is ever ready to show mercy.


Islam Will Conquer the World .

ALLAHU AKBAR
n if it was d other way, d guy wuld ave been stone to death undecided

3 Likes

Politics / Re: Oshiomhole And Iara At The Wedding Of Bayo Omoboriowo (photo) by dubai92(f): 8:23pm On Aug 01, 2015
Vanquay:
Am done I quit. I am an Extrovert not an Introvert. This Ftc madness has gotten the best of me.
My ps4 dey collect dust, gym I no fit go, I can't even keep up with keeping up with the Kardashians undecided. My BAEs Don dey disturb me. Just 24 more days of summer for me. I have no plans to waste here undecided

This woman is a role model to Gold Diggas undecided
haba guy u knw her b4? Ure datin boo, moni com, y una no go marry? Make dey wait for wetin again?

1 Like

Politics / Re: Nigeria Police - We Live Like Rats In The Barracks {picture} by dubai92(f): 2:38pm On Aug 01, 2015
funkebisibisi:
He was drenched with sweat by the time he wriggled himself through the narrow entrance of his room into the passageway. Looking very depressed and drowsy that Thursday afternoon, he dragged himself along the hole-ridden passage and collapsed into the rickety sofa beside the staircase that leads to the upper floors in one of the buildings in the barracks.

With frustration written all over his face, Emma Uden (not real names), a sergeant in the police, kept muttering to himself, but dosed off few minutes later. Apparently disturbed by the music blaring in his neighbourhood, Uden could not but open his eyes feebly and intermittently.

His pain was obvious to anyone who came across him, but the reason for his frustration was largely unknown. However, as Uden would later tell our correspondent in a conversation he grudgingly consented to, since the apartment allotted to him in the barracks collapsed in June last year, he and his family had been living in the kitchen of one of the dilapidated buildings in Pedro police barracks, Somolu, Lagos. That was his main frustration.

“It was the only alternative we had at that time,” he said, as he unbuttoned his shirt to enjoy some fresh air.

Since he and his family were constrained to live in a room (kitchen), he said life had become one of bitterness and frustration. To escape the intense heat of the day and the constant constraint of space that his family of six could never live comfortably with, Uden had been used to sitting outside anytime he was home.

Hoping that respite could eventually come his way if he opened up to Saturday PUNCH, Uden wasted no time in leading our correspondent to his room where he lives with his wife and their four children. He opened the door and lowered his head as he made to enter, to avoid being bruised on the head by the doorframe. As he opened the curtain for our correspondent to enter, the odour, which seemed like a mixture of wet rug and accumulated sweat, that oozed out of the stuffy room was disturbing and could make anybody puke.

The room was like a store reserved for unused household items. The only window in the room appeared dysfunctional while the base of the wall that was visible was seriously dampened, and the ceiling riddled with signs of serious dilapidation. Expectedly, Uden, whose four children had occupied the only bed in the room, appeared discomfited by the state of the place he called home as he continually scratched his head to look for the right words.

Even though he is not alone in such a tortuous situation in the premises, he said he had resorted to coming home just to sleep, unless he was off duty. This, he said, was to avail his family some space in the room and that sometimes he would rather stay in his office or volunteer to go on patrol, all in a bid to stay away from home. They don’t even live alone in the house, occasionally, the family live with big rats that find their way out of the broken septic tank located close to the kitchen into the room.

He said, “When we were still living in the room and parlour before our building collapsed last year, we were managing because of the small space, not to talk of now that we have just one room, which used to be a kitchen. It’s like living in a cave. That is the lot of most of us.

“Can you imagine that? We live in a kitchen, and you want policemen to be your friends while you all live in your comfortable mansions. You expect us to carry rifle and risk our lives to protect people. Haba!”

His passionate expression of grief was second to none, even though he said he had concluded arrangements to leave the barracks for a room and parlour accommodation he secured somewhere in Bariga area of Lagos.

He added, “If nobody takes care of us, we will take care of ourselves, because apart from the space issue, we (residents of this barracks) queue to use toilet and bathroom, because the ones available are not adequate. So we queue to bathe every morning. Here, three-room and parlour flats share one toilet and bathroom. For me and my family who live in an abandoned kitchen, we pair with another flat. So, we join the queue every morning.

“Don’t forget that we are all adults with families. I feel ashamed that I go through this every morning? Tell those people in government what you saw here. Let them know we are suffering. Even when we get to the office, we either sit under the tree or stand in the sun.”

Some other policemen in the barracks who shared Uden’s views, lamented over the poor state of infrastructure in the barracks, saying they had always been living in perpetual fear for their lives, occasioned by the decrepit buildings.

As our correspondent observed during the visit, almost all the buildings in the barracks had obvious signs of imminent collapse. In fact, the derelict of the block six that collapsed last year gives an impression that the collapse must have been imminent before it happened.

‘I cry when I look at my children’

One of Uden’s neighbours, who also lives in a room and parlour, told Saturday Punch that it is interesting that Nigerians expect so much from policemen they are not well taken care of. He said the hardship and the living condition he had had to subject his four children and his pregnant wife to made him cry sometimes.

Fighting back tears, he said, “Sometimes, when I look at the way my children sleep on the floor, sweat almost all the time because of the poor ventilation, and the obvious frustration and inconvenience written on their faces, I cry. I know that they are not happy with the situation, but they are helpless.

“I pity them when I see them going out to look for water, living in such a condition. Sometimes, when I’m at work, I think about them and it affects me. These things make me cry, silently. Sometimes, we are on the same queue at the entrance of the bathroom. You can imagine that. Which father will be proud of such?”

The situation at the Pedro Barracks is akin to what obtains in many other barracks across the country. It also revealed how barracks that used to be a status symbol for policemen have become a shadow of death in disguise.

In the past, it was mandatory for police officers and men to live in the barracks, as they were prevented from living among ‘civilians,’ but years after, the reverse is now the case.

These days, the status symbol is for any policeman worth his salt to live outside the barracks due to the ignominious life that obtains in there. Some of them even said jokingly that they live like prisoners.

This shift, as pointed out by the policemen who have lived in the barracks for many years, was due to the lack of maintenance of the barracks, increasing population with no attendant improvement in facilities and the refusal of the government to build new barracks for policemen...

http://www.punchng.com/feature/super-saturday-feature/we-live-like-rats-yet-nigerians-want-us-to-be-their-friends-policemen-living-in-dilapidated-barracks/
d 1st pix is nt a police barrack.it shuld b army barracks, n d road wiv d airconditions, are for dos army dat are bck frm operation in sudan or Liberia.
Fashion / Re: Meet The Queen Of Aso Nigeria 2015 Contestants- Photos by dubai92(f): 2:27pm On Aug 01, 2015
Truth24:
I vote dat Kalabari babe ; Asima Kate! Black is beautiful mehn...
u didn't see d Edo babe lukin naturaly beautiful grin.dat igbo babe luks lyk karachika cry

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