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Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana - Phones (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Science/Technology / Phones / Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana (12588 Views)

See Why Your Infinix Phone Is Not Charging/ Not Charging Fast / Infinix Phones Cost Far Cheaper In Kenya Than Nigeria, Why? / Moderately Cheap Android Phones You'd Want To Buy In This Recession. (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Nobody: 12:28pm On Dec 01, 2016
oluwapoju:
Phone is cheaper in Nigeria just because naira don't have any value outside the Nigeria border.
Thus making the naira equivalent higher..
Imaging 1000 exchanging for 10cedis
U son talk my
One finish. E be like say u dey Ghana. The 1000 to 10 Cedis exchange rate is at d Togo border but inside Ghana it's 1000naira to 8 Cedis
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Just30: 12:28pm On Dec 01, 2016
oluwapoju:
if i may ask... What ur job specification
make sure my team meet the sales target
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by oluwapoju(m): 12:47pm On Dec 01, 2016
If person still dey compare ghana money to nigeria, d person wan get hypertension be that.... A friend my bought a fairly used Samsung galaxy s5 for 800cedis.. he no complain.. just because he is working in ghana
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Daniel058(m): 1:00pm On Dec 01, 2016
oluwapoju:
Sir Am a student.....
Are you that rich... Make una send me money through Western Union
sharp guy!!
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Daniel058(m): 1:11pm On Dec 01, 2016
Just30:
I've been working for two years. I got out of school in 2013
lolz Chai, finally.. grin
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 1:14pm On Dec 01, 2016
MatthewDoyin:

300, Accra.

Wow that's on the high side. I once live at Nima and newtown in Accra. But here in Kumasi, you can even get 3 bedroom for that same price per month.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 1:19pm On Dec 01, 2016
dumo1:

U son talk my
One finish. E be like say u dey Ghana. The 1000 to 10 Cedis exchange rate is at d Togo border but inside Ghana it's 1000naira to 8 Cedis

wow so even 8 cedis now. Make God help o. 80 cedis is now 10k naira. 8 cedis wey be say na 4k before hmm
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Nobody: 1:21pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


Wow that's on the high side. I have was once at Nima and newtown in Accra. Here in Kumasi you can even get 3 bedroom for that same price per month.
Good for you man.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 1:22pm On Dec 01, 2016
Daniel058:
lolz Chai, finally.. grin
Abi
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Daniel058(m): 1:27pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


Abi
Just30:
Stop spewing garbage, I live in Ghana and I've been here for the past 11years.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 1:28pm On Dec 01, 2016
Just30:
rent is not even expensive that much yet you're crying. I rent a GHS200 a month property.the only problem is , I have to pay a two years advance

only two years? In some part here in Ashanti region, they may demand 4-5 years. I was interested in a store sometimes ago, the guy man said I should pay for 11 years. Although the monthly rent was okay but he said he was owing some people and he wanted to use the proceeds from the rent to pay. I just turned usain bolt and disappear...Although, they used to say that we nigerians caused it because some people will come and volunteered to pay 10 years in advance for their property.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by oluwapoju(m): 1:30pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


only two years? In some part here in Ashanti region, they may demand 4-5 years. I was interested in a store sometimes ago, the guy man said I should pay for 11 years. Although the monthly rent was okay but he said he was owing some people and he wanted to use the proceeds from the rent to pay. I just turned usain bolt and disappear...Although, they used to say that we nigerians caused it because some people will come and volunteered to pay 10 years in advance for their property.
nah d g bois be that ooo... 11 years wetin.. i go run pass flash

1 Like

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 1:31pm On Dec 01, 2016
oluwapoju:
If person still dey compare ghana money to nigeria, d person wan get hypertension be that.... A friend my bought a fairly used Samsung galaxy s5 for 800cedis.. he no compare.. just because he is working in ghana

LOL...
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by laribari(m): 1:52pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


Really ? Are you in Ghana presently.

Bros me just dey joke o! But on a serious note, things are cheap in Ghana and those are things that determines economy of any nation. Do they have China fones in Ghana? I'm just wondering, abi their China fones sef dey costly?
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by iamord(m): 2:18pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


Standard of living is higher ? How please. Have you ever been to Ghana to live over 2-3 months period ? Life in Ghana is not ON HD pls. Yes stable light and security even know there is so much kidnapping going on because the ashanti queen mother just died and they have been using foreigners for sacrifices.
what,kind of smelly talk is this ?
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by VegetarainVamp(f): 4:02pm On Dec 01, 2016
learn how to make thousands of Naira weekly with just a start up capital of N500contact me on this number 09031980226to be added to our WhatsApp group for free seminars
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Nobody: 4:10pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


wow so even 8 cedis now. Make God help o. 80 cedis is now 10k naira. 8 cedis wey be say na 4k before hmm
I tell you bro. Naira has no value anymore. It's just sad

1 Like

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Nero2220(m): 4:44pm On Dec 01, 2016
FunkyMetahuman:
we are all learning too. Nobody knows it all.


Anyway, it's like this,

Before, Ghana's currency is like 10000 cedis to a naira, which is what their economy actually reflects.
So Ghanaian government redonminate the currency, (redonmination simply means they removed certain amount of zeros from their currency to have less zeros.. Like 10000 cedis will be equivalent to 1cedi.)

E.g
If a bread used to cost 10000 cedis, after redonmination, the bread will cos 1 cedis. But in actual economic reality, the bread is still 10000cedis.
Redonmination is usually done to checkmate inflation at a certain period and it has its own perks too.

E.g like someone said, you cant survive on 50k in Ghana for like a month, question is, how easy is it to make 50k in Ghana compared to Nigeria? That's where the economy reality sets in.


Get it now?
A splendid reply.Right until the early 2000, the Ghanaian cedi was exchanging at a rate of about 2500/3000 to the US dollar. During this same period, the naira was being exchanged at a rate of 120 to the US dollar. The Ghanaian government then decided to redominate the cedi(knocking off some zeros) 2 to ease business transactions and to also curb inflation.

1 Like

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 4:47pm On Dec 01, 2016
laribari:


Bros me just dey joke o! But on a serious note, things are cheap in Ghana and those are things that determines economy of any nation. Do they have China fones in Ghana? I'm just wondering, abi their China fones sef dey costly?

Best of China phone you go find dem for Ghana. Ghana is the land of many China Android phones, used clothes and even used handkerchief lolz.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 4:50pm On Dec 01, 2016
iamord:
what,kind of smelly talk is this ?
Smelly ? cover your nostrils... Are you here to counter this claim of mine?
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Just30: 5:32pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


only two years? In some part here in Ashanti region, they may demand 4-5 years. I was interested in a store sometimes ago, the guy man said I should pay for 11 years. Although the monthly rent was okay but he said he was owing some people and he wanted to use the proceeds from the rent to pay. I just turned usain bolt and disappear...Although, they used to say that we nigerians caused it because some people will come and volunteered to pay 10 years in advance for their property.
Yea, its true. Then , they used to charge just six months. Now people are not interested in giving short term lease especially for shops

1 Like

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by CrudeGH: 7:38pm On Dec 01, 2016
Rubbish upon rubbish

Mudder fugger! How is it my fault that your country is in recession? even a child born today know shitnigeria is a zoo populated by animals grin

Or how is it my fault that country armpit country is fvcked!

Don’t start what you cant finish, magg0t!


[s]
laribari:


I do not care about anything you say as people are entitled to their opinions but was pissed when you said "your recession plagued country". Bros you have crossed the line!

I'm so sure you live in Nigeria or u have folks here and if you claim not to be, well at least you are on Naira Land! So who is obsessed here? Why are you stalking Nigerians? Crude? Hummm? Reminds me of crude oil and of cos Ghana will always wanna be like us in that area and like it or not.

The truth is recession can happen to anyone and we have seen better economies go down too, Greek economy with all their inventions, the Spanish and even portugal to name a few. Do you know how many countries Nigeria h bailed out financially in our history?

Despite all the loots from past governments in billions of dollars (which is a shame), if such happen to Ghana I bet u country will close shop by now. Do u know how many years of misappropriation of fund before this great country could recess.

[/s]
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by CrudeGH: 7:40pm On Dec 01, 2016

another magg0t spewing trash from its AnUs!

Ghana is expensive? Yet the last time I checked, our people were not eating from dustbins
grin http://www.thenigerianvoice.com/news/72698/1/the-dustbin-days-have-finally-arrived.html grin grin grin

Henryadaku:



Yay I like this topic ........your country is shit imagine I go Accra wan go buy sponge dem say 10cedis which is 1k some say 25sef 2500 Nah elephant I wan baff?? My mum called me three days ago telling me how two white diploma came into her office happy how they worked their transfer out of Accra to Abuja.. Cos of how expensive it is
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by CrudeGH: 7:48pm On Dec 01, 2016
I can see most of you fuelish shitnigerians suffer from schizophrenia.

At least Ghana can "celebrate" stable electricity. What can you shitnigerians celebrate apart from corruption, baby factories, robberies, kidnappings, ritual murders, boko haram, militancy, prostitution? grin grin grin chai,

wao, 90% of you mudder fuggers are mad grin




[s]
Papyrus411:


Comparing phone prices is now an issue to you ? Because you are a ghanian I should no longer Post on NAIRALAND? Nigeria is never obsessed with Ghanians. It has always been the opposite. Apart from your stable electricity there is nothing to behold with any bewildered amusement about Ghana Charlie.
[/s]

1 Like

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by CrudeGH: 7:53pm On Dec 01, 2016
hahahaha shitnigerians will never stop disgracing themselves,huh? grinhttps://www.nairaland.com/3494282/black-friday-ibadan-shoprite-customers

Henryadaku:



Yay I like this topic ........your country is shit imagine I go Accra wan go buy sponge dem say 10cedis which is 1k some say 25sef 2500 Nah elephant I wan baff?? My mum called me three days ago telling me how two white diploma came into her office happy how they worked their transfer out of Accra to Abuja.. Cos of how expensive it is
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by laribari(m): 7:55pm On Dec 01, 2016
Papyrus411:


Best of China phone you go find dem for Ghana. Ghana is the land of many China Android phones, used clothes and even used handkerchief lolz.

okirika you mean? Lol
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by laribari(m): 8:50pm On Dec 01, 2016
CrudeGH:

Rubbish upon rubbish

Mudder fugger! How is it my fault that your country is in recession? even a child born today know shitnigeria is a zoo populated by animals grin

Or how is it my fault that country armpit country is fvcked!

Don’t start what you cant finish, magg0t!







[s][/s]

Hahahahahaha trash!! Like there are no crimes in Europe and America.

Let me remind you! Have you forgotten once in your history that your ricketty tiny country was seeking refuge (as refugees) in Nigeria? Do you know where the phrase Ghana must go emanated from? Lol

We have always been bigger and will continue to be. Please name one rich man in Ghana even your king and let's see where they are ranked in business. U know what? Nigerians are the greatest black people ever existed and I'm not kidding.

Have heard of these people?


Philip Emeagwali, voted "Father of Supercomputing," is ranked #1 in computing. And ranked FIRST by Google for "contribution to the development of the computer." Philip Emeagwali For Kids. Philip Emeagwali: A Father of the Internet.


Genius! Nigerian Scholar Solves 156-year-old Tricky Maths Hypothesis, Wins $1m Prize
Posted by Lolade on Mon 16th Nov, 2015 - tori.ng

A Nigerian Mathematician has made history by solving a 156-year-old dicey mathematical hypothesis.

The scholar, who is also an academic at the Federal University, Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State, Dr. Opeyemi Enoch, has provided proof for the old Riemann Hypothesis, thereby solving a 156-year-old problem that has remained a knotty issue in mathematics.


Friday, 21 October 2016
Nigerian surgeon removes baby from mother's womb, operates on her tumor & returns her back.

This amazing feat was performed by a surgeon who is  nigerian but  based in the U.S , Dr Oluyinka Olutoye, and his surgeon partner , Dr. Darrell Cass of Texas Children's Hospital

Nigerians are doing extraordinary and remarkable things abroad. This cuts across different areas, bits, and talents. They are those that the nation could be proud of at any point. Here is a list of some of them.

...........
A Nigerian student has broken a 30-year-old maths equation and achieved the highest grades at a university in Japan for 50 years.

Ufot Ekong, who studied at Tokai University in Tokyo, achieved a first class degree in electrical engineering and scored the best marks at the university since 1965, the Flotilla Magazine reported.

Meet Jelani Aliyu, Nigerian genius who designed Chevrolet Volt (PHOTOS, VIDEO) - African Spotlight.

Do not forget that our own Agbani darego also won miss world too. We have emerged the best at many great things, leaving tiny Ghana crawling behind. Even in world sport we are beta.

Ghana's Olympic History And Record – 4 Medals Since 1952 - Modernghana.com
https://m.modernghana.com/.../ghanas- ...
10 Aug 2016 ... Ghanaian athletes have won a total of four Olympics medals, three (two bronze and one ... Nigeria in 1996 and Cameroun in 2000 won Olympic gold in football for Africa.


Check out these ones too (Nigerians in top office presently).


1. Akinwunmi Adeshina: Akinwunmi is the current president of African Development Bank. A position he thoroughly deserves because of his amazing record as a distinguished public servant. A graduate of the University of Ife,(now Obafemi Awolowo University) Adeshina is Nigeria’s former Minister of agriculture and his time in office revolutionized the sector in Nigeria. He particularly intiated a transparent process in the sector’s fertiliser supply chain which helped the cause of local farmers thereby increasing farming activities and boosting food production across the nation. Before his appointment as a minister by former President Goodluck Jonathan, Adeshina had a stint at Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) where he served as vice president of policy and partnerships. He also previously worked at the Rockefeller Foundation.



2. Arunma Oteh : She is the current vice president and treasurer of the World Bank. Ms Oteh is credited for sanitizing Nigeria’s capital market during her time as the Director-General of the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC). The University of Nsukka graduate, had stints with the African Development Bank, Harvard Institute of International Development and Centre Point Investments Limited, Nigeria before she was appointed as SEC DG by Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Efforts by some unscrupulous politicians in Nigeria’s House of Representatives to rubbish Oteh’s achievements was rebuffed by the Abia state-born woman, who exposed the legislator’s demand for bribe, after which she was given a clean bill of health by PricewaterhouseCoopers following allegations of financial impropriety against her.



3. Mohammed Barkindo: He was recently appointed as the secretary general of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). His appointment didn’t come as a surprise to industry experts as Barkindo has been a major stakeholder in international oil politics for over a decade. He was also the former special assistant to Late Rilwan Lukman, also a former secretary general of OPEC. Apart from his rich history in oil and gas, The 56-year old also has experience in the banking sector and international trading companies. He was appointed as the group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in 2009. He was however booted out of office by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2010 after which he returned to OPEC. Barkindo has an honourary doctorate degree of science from the Federal University of Technology Yola (FUTY).



4. Babs Omotowa: Shell International has recently appointed Babs Omotowa as the Global Vice President (S&E). Babs Omotowa is the outgoing managing director and chief executive officer of NLNG. He will complete his time at NLNG on September 1, 2016 and report to the upstream director across Shell’s conventional, unconventional and deepwater global businesses.



5.. Babatunde Osotimehin: Ogun state-born Osotimehin is the Executive Director of United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and he is currently serving in his second term of four years. Before his appointment as UNFPA head, Osotimehin was Nigeria’s minister of health under Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Before then, he was the Director-General of the National Action Committee on AIDS (NACA), a position where he achieved great success. In October 2009, Osotimehin was applauded for his directive to Nigerian hospitals to treat accident and gunshot victims. His directive was timely as many innocent citizens had lost their lives due to the hospitals negligence. Osotimehin is a member of the Nigerian Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Nigerian Medical Association, Nigerian Institute of Management and Royal College of Physicians (UK) among others.


6. Yemi Babington-Ashaye: Babington-Ashaye is the head, Global Shapers Community and director at the World Economic Forum. He started his career as a Chartered Accountant (ACCA) and was a member of the Financial Management Programme at the financial services unit of the American conglomerate General Electric – GE Capital. While working for Nigeria's former minister of finance,Okojo Iweala, as technical advisor for economic growth, he ensured the integration of economic data and information into the decision-making process, which culminated in the development of State of the Nation reports that guided policy priorities. In addition to overseeing fiscal policy matters, he also designed stakeholder outreach sessions which were effective and applauded by financial experts.



7. David Oyelowo: The Selma actor and black James Bond was born to Yoruba parents in London, England. In his 20s, David enjoyed a very successful career on the London stage, receiving his formal training from the London Academy of Drama and Music Art. He has starred in a number of hit TV shows and movies – Spooks, The Butler, The Passion of the Christ and the Martin Luther King Jr. biopic, Selma – and is happily married to a British actress named Jessica.



8.John Boyega: John, Hollywood’s new kid on the block was raised by Nigerian parents in Peckham, South London. He started acting in school plays from an early age right down to his late teens when he trained at the Identity School of Acting, Hackney. Before his huge breakout role in the latest installment of theStar Wars franchise, he acted in the film adaptation of Half of A Yellow Sun, written by fellow Nigerian, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Notably, he was an acquaintance of Damilola Taylor, the Nigerian schoolboy in England who was gunned down in 2000. The story made major headline news.



9. Duro Olowu: US First lady Michelle Obama has this talented Nigerian-born designer to thank for her signature flowery prints. Duro was raised by a Jamaican mother and Yoruba father in Nigeria before being shipped off to a boarding school in London, England. He was a huge fan of fashion from an early age, but his parents were against it as a career. Fortunately, he won them over, and has enjoyed major milestones in his career ever since – a partnership deal with popular US brand, JC Penney in 2014 and the honour of designing the White House in 2015.



10. Oluchi Onweagba-Orlandi: After winning Nokia Face of Africa competition in 1998, the black beauty has graced the covers of Italian Vogue and ELLE, with features in Nylon, Marie Claire and Allure magazines. She is considerably one of the most sought-after models of her generation, and now manages upcoming talents with her agency, OModels in South Africa.


11. Hakeem Kae- Kazim: Hakeem spent the early part of his life in Lagos, Nigeria before moving to London for training in the Briston Old Vic Theatre School. He went ahead to act in a range of well-known movies like the thrilling Hotel Rwanda, Pirates of the Carribean: At World’s End and X-Men Origins: Wolverine.You may also recognize his distinct voice from Call of Duty 3 and Halo 3 video games among others.



12. Biyi Bamidele: John Boyega has also worked with this phenomenal Nigerian talent. Biyi is an internationally acclaimed novelist and film director with several international awards under his belt. You may know him as the director of Half of A Yellow Sun and the Mo Abudu production, Fifty which premiered to rave reviews last year. He spent the first 22 years of his life in Kaduna, Lagos and Ile-Ife before heading to the UK to kickstart his career.



13. Dr. Bernet Omalu: When Hollywood decides to film a movie based on your life, then you know you’ve hit it big. The Nigerian-American physician, forensic pathologist and neuropathologist has gone down in history as the first to publish findings on chronic tramautic encephalopathy, changing the face of sports medicine as we know it. His theory highlighted concussions during gametime as the cause of dementia found in some National Football League players; a theory which faced major uproar from the community. After learning of his story, Will Smith portrayed him in the 2015 bipoic, Concussion.


NOTE

Apart Kofi Anan, when I think of Ghana, the only thing I see are shoe makers, tailors and dokunu sellers and did u say nigerians are into prostitution? Then u are not a ghanian if you don't know what your ladies do.

U said I shouldn't start what I can't finish, we'll u don't know me. I will floor you! Let's see!! If I take you into academics, u will see that nigerians are the smartest blacks in this world. Fact!!! We are breaking bounds, creating records.

5 Likes

Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by laribari(m): 8:51pm On Dec 01, 2016
CrudeGH:

Rubbish upon rubbish

Mudder fugger! How is it my fault that your country is in recession? even a child born today know shitnigeria is a zoo populated by animals grin

Or how is it my fault that country armpit country is fvcked!

Don’t start what you cant finish, magg0t!







[s][/s]

Hahahahahaha trash!! Like there are no crimes in Europe and America.

Let me remind you! Have you forgotten once in your history that your ricketty tiny country was seeking refuge (as refugees) in Nigeria? Do you know where the phrase Ghana must go emanated from? Lol

We have always been bigger and will continue to be. Please name one rich man in Ghana even your king and let's see where they are ranked in business. U know what? Nigerians are the greatest black people ever existed and I'm not kidding.

Have heard of these people?


Philip Emeagwali, voted "Father of Supercomputing," is ranked #1 in computing. And ranked FIRST by Google for "contribution to the development of the computer." Philip Emeagwali For Kids. Philip Emeagwali: A Father of the Internet.


Genius! Nigerian Scholar Solves 156-year-old Tricky Maths Hypothesis, Wins $1m Prize
Posted by Lolade on Mon 16th Nov, 2015 - tori.ng

A Nigerian Mathematician has made history by solving a 156-year-old dicey mathematical hypothesis.

The scholar, who is also an academic at the Federal University, Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State, Dr. Opeyemi Enoch, has provided proof for the old Riemann Hypothesis, thereby solving a 156-year-old problem that has remained a knotty issue in mathematics.


Friday, 21 October 2016
Nigerian surgeon removes baby from mother's womb, operates on her tumor & returns her back.

This amazing feat was performed by a surgeon who is  nigerian but  based in the U.S , Dr Oluyinka Olutoye, and his surgeon partner , Dr. Darrell Cass of Texas Children's Hospital

Nigerians are doing extraordinary and remarkable things abroad. This cuts across different areas, bits, and talents. They are those that the nation could be proud of at any point. Here is a list of some of them.

...........
A Nigerian student has broken a 30-year-old maths equation and achieved the highest grades at a university in Japan for 50 years.

Ufot Ekong, who studied at Tokai University in Tokyo, achieved a first class degree in electrical engineering and scored the best marks at the university since 1965, the Flotilla Magazine reported.

Meet Jelani Aliyu, Nigerian genius who designed Chevrolet Volt (PHOTOS, VIDEO) - African Spotlight.

Do not forget that our own Agbani darego also won miss world too. We have emerged the best at many great things, leaving tiny Ghana crawling behind. Even in world sport we are beta.

Ghana's Olympic History And Record – 4 Medals Since 1952 - Modernghana.com
https://m.modernghana.com/.../ghanas- ...
10 Aug 2016 ... Ghanaian athletes have won a total of four Olympics medals, three (two bronze and one ... Nigeria in 1996 and Cameroun in 2000 won Olympic gold in football for Africa.


Check out these ones too (Nigerians in top office presently).


1. Akinwunmi Adeshina: Akinwunmi is the current president of African Development Bank. A position he thoroughly deserves because of his amazing record as a distinguished public servant. A graduate of the University of Ife,(now Obafemi Awolowo University) Adeshina is Nigeria’s former Minister of agriculture and his time in office revolutionized the sector in Nigeria. He particularly intiated a transparent process in the sector’s fertiliser supply chain which helped the cause of local farmers thereby increasing farming activities and boosting food production across the nation. Before his appointment as a minister by former President Goodluck Jonathan, Adeshina had a stint at Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) where he served as vice president of policy and partnerships. He also previously worked at the Rockefeller Foundation.



2. Arunma Oteh : She is the current vice president and treasurer of the World Bank. Ms Oteh is credited for sanitizing Nigeria’s capital market during her time as the Director-General of the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC). The University of Nsukka graduate, had stints with the African Development Bank, Harvard Institute of International Development and Centre Point Investments Limited, Nigeria before she was appointed as SEC DG by Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Efforts by some unscrupulous politicians in Nigeria’s House of Representatives to rubbish Oteh’s achievements was rebuffed by the Abia state-born woman, who exposed the legislator’s demand for bribe, after which she was given a clean bill of health by PricewaterhouseCoopers following allegations of financial impropriety against her.



3. Mohammed Barkindo: He was recently appointed as the secretary general of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). His appointment didn’t come as a surprise to industry experts as Barkindo has been a major stakeholder in international oil politics for over a decade. He was also the former special assistant to Late Rilwan Lukman, also a former secretary general of OPEC. Apart from his rich history in oil and gas, The 56-year old also has experience in the banking sector and international trading companies. He was appointed as the group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in 2009. He was however booted out of office by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2010 after which he returned to OPEC. Barkindo has an honourary doctorate degree of science from the Federal University of Technology Yola (FUTY).



4. Babs Omotowa: Shell International has recently appointed Babs Omotowa as the Global Vice President (S&E). Babs Omotowa is the outgoing managing director and chief executive officer of NLNG. He will complete his time at NLNG on September 1, 2016 and report to the upstream director across Shell’s conventional, unconventional and deepwater global businesses.



5.. Babatunde Osotimehin: Ogun state-born Osotimehin is the Executive Director of United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and he is currently serving in his second term of four years. Before his appointment as UNFPA head, Osotimehin was Nigeria’s minister of health under Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Before then, he was the Director-General of the National Action Committee on AIDS (NACA), a position where he achieved great success. In October 2009, Osotimehin was applauded for his directive to Nigerian hospitals to treat accident and gunshot victims. His directive was timely as many innocent citizens had lost their lives due to the hospitals negligence. Osotimehin is a member of the Nigerian Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Nigerian Medical Association, Nigerian Institute of Management and Royal College of Physicians (UK) among others.


6. Yemi Babington-Ashaye: Babington-Ashaye is the head, Global Shapers Community and director at the World Economic Forum. He started his career as a Chartered Accountant (ACCA) and was a member of the Financial Management Programme at the financial services unit of the American conglomerate General Electric – GE Capital. While working for Nigeria's former minister of finance,Okojo Iweala, as technical advisor for economic growth, he ensured the integration of economic data and information into the decision-making process, which culminated in the development of State of the Nation reports that guided policy priorities. In addition to overseeing fiscal policy matters, he also designed stakeholder outreach sessions which were effective and applauded by financial experts.



7. David Oyelowo: The Selma actor and black James Bond was born to Yoruba parents in London, England. In his 20s, David enjoyed a very successful career on the London stage, receiving his formal training from the London Academy of Drama and Music Art. He has starred in a number of hit TV shows and movies – Spooks, The Butler, The Passion of the Christ and the Martin Luther King Jr. biopic, Selma – and is happily married to a British actress named Jessica.



8.John Boyega: John, Hollywood’s new kid on the block was raised by Nigerian parents in Peckham, South London. He started acting in school plays from an early age right down to his late teens when he trained at the Identity School of Acting, Hackney. Before his huge breakout role in the latest installment of theStar Wars franchise, he acted in the film adaptation of Half of A Yellow Sun, written by fellow Nigerian, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Notably, he was an acquaintance of Damilola Taylor, the Nigerian schoolboy in England who was gunned down in 2000. The story made major headline news.



9. Duro Olowu: US First lady Michelle Obama has this talented Nigerian-born designer to thank for her signature flowery prints. Duro was raised by a Jamaican mother and Yoruba father in Nigeria before being shipped off to a boarding school in London, England. He was a huge fan of fashion from an early age, but his parents were against it as a career. Fortunately, he won them over, and has enjoyed major milestones in his career ever since – a partnership deal with popular US brand, JC Penney in 2014 and the honour of designing the White House in 2015.



10. Oluchi Onweagba-Orlandi: After winning Nokia Face of Africa competition in 1998, the black beauty has graced the covers of Italian Vogue and ELLE, with features in Nylon, Marie Claire and Allure magazines. She is considerably one of the most sought-after models of her generation, and now manages upcoming talents with her agency, OModels in South Africa.


11. Hakeem Kae- Kazim: Hakeem spent the early part of his life in Lagos, Nigeria before moving to London for training in the Briston Old Vic Theatre School. He went ahead to act in a range of well-known movies like the thrilling Hotel Rwanda, Pirates of the Carribean: At World’s End and X-Men Origins: Wolverine.You may also recognize his distinct voice from Call of Duty 3 and Halo 3 video games among others.



12. Biyi Bamidele: John Boyega has also worked with this phenomenal Nigerian talent. Biyi is an internationally acclaimed novelist and film director with several international awards under his belt. You may know him as the director of Half of A Yellow Sun and the Mo Abudu production, Fifty which premiered to rave reviews last year. He spent the first 22 years of his life in Kaduna, Lagos and Ile-Ife before heading to the UK to kickstart his career.



13. Dr. Bernet Omalu: When Hollywood decides to film a movie based on your life, then you know you’ve hit it big. The Nigerian-American physician, forensic pathologist and neuropathologist has gone down in history as the first to publish findings on chronic tramautic encephalopathy, changing the face of sports medicine as we know it. His theory highlighted concussions during gametime as the cause of dementia found in some National Football League players; a theory which faced major uproar from the community. After learning of his story, Will Smith portrayed him in the 2015 bipoic, Concussion.


NOTE

Apart Kofi Anan, when I think of Ghana, the only thing I see are shoe makers, tailors and dokunu sellers and did u say nigerians are into prostitution? Then u are not a ghanian if you don't know what your ladies do.

U said I shouldn't start what I can't finish, we'll u don't know me. I will floor you! Let's see!! If I take you into academics, u will see that nigerians are the smartest blacks (Africans) in this world. Fact!!! We are breaking bounds, creating records and making history.

No wonder Ghana has always been envious. We are not dragging supremacy with you because we are your father.

So do not even attack the Nigerian personality because we are brighter than you. Because Greek suffered recession, does it make tiny Ghana beta than them? Only in your dreams.

Even in arts and culture we are well celebrated worldwide than Ghana.
Recession, recession, yet Nigerians are among the richest people in Ghana. Lol

Nigerians no doubt play a big part in the Ghanaian economy.

Below is a list of them and their profiles.

1- Chief Dr. Prince Christopher Obareki is the CEO/Chairman of CHRISBAKI Group Of Companies.

2-Yemi Adetuwo is the MD/CEO and board member of Equity Assurance Ghana Limited.

3-Mr. David Ishola Akintunde is the Chief Operating Officer of Equity Assurance Ghana Limited.

4-Dele Momodu owner of Ovasion Magazine

5. Mr. Cornelius Iyiola Saraki is the Managing Director of Nem Insurance Co. Ltd.

6. Iyiola Ayoade is the C.E.O of CHARTERHOUSE the biggest name in terms of events, above and below line advertising and showbiz in Ghana

I can go on and on and on. These are scholars and business people gracing the Ghana economy and not shoe makers.

What an Ghana do without us? Else why are you on naira land? Lol
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Just30: 9:13pm On Dec 01, 2016
laribari:


Hahahahahaha trash!! Like there are no crimes in Europe and America.

Let me remind you! Have you forgotten once in your history that your ricketty tiny country was seeking refuge (as refugees) in Nigeria? Do you know where the phrase Ghana must go emanated from? Lol

We have always been bigger and will continue to be. Please name one rich man in Ghana even your king and let's see where they are ranked in business. U know what? Nigerians are the greatest black people ever existed and I'm not kidding.

Have heard of these people?


Philip Emeagwali, voted "Father of Supercomputing," is ranked #1 in computing. And ranked FIRST by Google for "contribution to the development of the computer." Philip Emeagwali For Kids. Philip Emeagwali: A Father of the Internet.


Genius! Nigerian Scholar Solves 156-year-old Tricky Maths Hypothesis, Wins $1m Prize
Posted by Lolade on Mon 16th Nov, 2015 - tori.ng

A Nigerian Mathematician has made history by solving a 156-year-old dicey mathematical hypothesis.

The scholar, who is also an academic at the Federal University, Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State, Dr. Opeyemi Enoch, has provided proof for the old Riemann Hypothesis, thereby solving a 156-year-old problem that has remained a knotty issue in mathematics.


Friday, 21 October 2016
Nigerian surgeon removes baby from mother's womb, operates on her tumor & returns her back.

This amazing feat was performed by a surgeon who is  nigerian but  based in the U.S , Dr Oluyinka Olutoye, and his surgeon partner , Dr. Darrell Cass of Texas Children's Hospital

Nigerians are doing extraordinary and remarkable things abroad. This cuts across different areas, bits, and talents. They are those that the nation could be proud of at any point. Here is a list of some of them.

...........
A Nigerian student has broken a 30-year-old maths equation and achieved the highest grades at a university in Japan for 50 years.

Ufot Ekong, who studied at Tokai University in Tokyo, achieved a first class degree in electrical engineering and scored the best marks at the university since 1965, the Flotilla Magazine reported.

Meet Jelani Aliyu, Nigerian genius who designed Chevrolet Volt (PHOTOS, VIDEO) - African Spotlight.

Do not forget that our own Agbani darego also won miss world too. We have emerged the best at many great things, leaving tiny Ghana crawling behind. Even in world sport we are beta.

Ghana's Olympic History And Record – 4 Medals Since 1952 - Modernghana.com
https://m.modernghana.com/.../ghanas- ...
10 Aug 2016 ... Ghanaian athletes have won a total of four Olympics medals, three (two bronze and one ... Nigeria in 1996 and Cameroun in 2000 won Olympic gold in football for Africa.


Check out these ones too (Nigerians in top office presently).


1. Akinwunmi Adeshina: Akinwunmi is the current president of African Development Bank. A position he thoroughly deserves because of his amazing record as a distinguished public servant. A graduate of the University of Ife,(now Obafemi Awolowo University) Adeshina is Nigeria’s former Minister of agriculture and his time in office revolutionized the sector in Nigeria. He particularly intiated a transparent process in the sector’s fertiliser supply chain which helped the cause of local farmers thereby increasing farming activities and boosting food production across the nation. Before his appointment as a minister by former President Goodluck Jonathan, Adeshina had a stint at Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) where he served as vice president of policy and partnerships. He also previously worked at the Rockefeller Foundation.



2. Arunma Oteh : She is the current vice president and treasurer of the World Bank. Ms Oteh is credited for sanitizing Nigeria’s capital market during her time as the Director-General of the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC). The University of Nsukka graduate, had stints with the African Development Bank, Harvard Institute of International Development and Centre Point Investments Limited, Nigeria before she was appointed as SEC DG by Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Efforts by some unscrupulous politicians in Nigeria’s House of Representatives to rubbish Oteh’s achievements was rebuffed by the Abia state-born woman, who exposed the legislator’s demand for bribe, after which she was given a clean bill of health by PricewaterhouseCoopers following allegations of financial impropriety against her.



3. Mohammed Barkindo: He was recently appointed as the secretary general of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). His appointment didn’t come as a surprise to industry experts as Barkindo has been a major stakeholder in international oil politics for over a decade. He was also the former special assistant to Late Rilwan Lukman, also a former secretary general of OPEC. Apart from his rich history in oil and gas, The 56-year old also has experience in the banking sector and international trading companies. He was appointed as the group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in 2009. He was however booted out of office by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2010 after which he returned to OPEC. Barkindo has an honourary doctorate degree of science from the Federal University of Technology Yola (FUTY).



4. Babs Omotowa: Shell International has recently appointed Babs Omotowa as the Global Vice President (S&E). Babs Omotowa is the outgoing managing director and chief executive officer of NLNG. He will complete his time at NLNG on September 1, 2016 and report to the upstream director across Shell’s conventional, unconventional and deepwater global businesses.



5.. Babatunde Osotimehin: Ogun state-born Osotimehin is the Executive Director of United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and he is currently serving in his second term of four years. Before his appointment as UNFPA head, Osotimehin was Nigeria’s minister of health under Late President Umaru Musa Yar’adua. Before then, he was the Director-General of the National Action Committee on AIDS (NACA), a position where he achieved great success. In October 2009, Osotimehin was applauded for his directive to Nigerian hospitals to treat accident and gunshot victims. His directive was timely as many innocent citizens had lost their lives due to the hospitals negligence. Osotimehin is a member of the Nigerian Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Nigerian Medical Association, Nigerian Institute of Management and Royal College of Physicians (UK) among others.


6. Yemi Babington-Ashaye: Babington-Ashaye is the head, Global Shapers Community and director at the World Economic Forum. He started his career as a Chartered Accountant (ACCA) and was a member of the Financial Management Programme at the financial services unit of the American conglomerate General Electric – GE Capital. While working for Nigeria's former minister of finance,Okojo Iweala, as technical advisor for economic growth, he ensured the integration of economic data and information into the decision-making process, which culminated in the development of State of the Nation reports that guided policy priorities. In addition to overseeing fiscal policy matters, he also designed stakeholder outreach sessions which were effective and applauded by financial experts.



7. David Oyelowo: The Selma actor and black James Bond was born to Yoruba parents in London, England. In his 20s, David enjoyed a very successful career on the London stage, receiving his formal training from the London Academy of Drama and Music Art. He has starred in a number of hit TV shows and movies – Spooks, The Butler, The Passion of the Christ and the Martin Luther King Jr. biopic, Selma – and is happily married to a British actress named Jessica.



8.John Boyega: John, Hollywood’s new kid on the block was raised by Nigerian parents in Peckham, South London. He started acting in school plays from an early age right down to his late teens when he trained at the Identity School of Acting, Hackney. Before his huge breakout role in the latest installment of theStar Wars franchise, he acted in the film adaptation of Half of A Yellow Sun, written by fellow Nigerian, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Notably, he was an acquaintance of Damilola Taylor, the Nigerian schoolboy in England who was gunned down in 2000. The story made major headline news.



9. Duro Olowu: US First lady Michelle Obama has this talented Nigerian-born designer to thank for her signature flowery prints. Duro was raised by a Jamaican mother and Yoruba father in Nigeria before being shipped off to a boarding school in London, England. He was a huge fan of fashion from an early age, but his parents were against it as a career. Fortunately, he won them over, and has enjoyed major milestones in his career ever since – a partnership deal with popular US brand, JC Penney in 2014 and the honour of designing the White House in 2015.



10. Oluchi Onweagba-Orlandi: After winning Nokia Face of Africa competition in 1998, the black beauty has graced the covers of Italian Vogue and ELLE, with features in Nylon, Marie Claire and Allure magazines. She is considerably one of the most sought-after models of her generation, and now manages upcoming talents with her agency, OModels in South Africa.


11. Hakeem Kae- Kazim: Hakeem spent the early part of his life in Lagos, Nigeria before moving to London for training in the Briston Old Vic Theatre School. He went ahead to act in a range of well-known movies like the thrilling Hotel Rwanda, Pirates of the Carribean: At World’s End and X-Men Origins: Wolverine.You may also recognize his distinct voice from Call of Duty 3 and Halo 3 video games among others.



12. Biyi Bamidele: John Boyega has also worked with this phenomenal Nigerian talent. Biyi is an internationally acclaimed novelist and film director with several international awards under his belt. You may know him as the director of Half of A Yellow Sun and the Mo Abudu production, Fifty which premiered to rave reviews last year. He spent the first 22 years of his life in Kaduna, Lagos and Ile-Ife before heading to the UK to kickstart his career.



13. Dr. Bernet Omalu: When Hollywood decides to film a movie based on your life, then you know you’ve hit it big. The Nigerian-American physician, forensic pathologist and neuropathologist has gone down in history as the first to publish findings on chronic tramautic encephalopathy, changing the face of sports medicine as we know it. His theory highlighted concussions during gametime as the cause of dementia found in some National Football League players; a theory which faced major uproar from the community. After learning of his story, Will Smith portrayed him in the 2015 bipoic, Concussion.


NOTE

Apart Kofi Anan, when I think of Ghana, the only thing I see are shoe makers, tailors and dokunu sellers and did u say nigerians are into prostitution? Then u are not a ghanian if you don't know what your ladies do.

U said I shouldn't start what I can't finish, we'll u don't know me. I will floor you! Let's see!! If I take you into academics, u will see that nigerians are the smartest blacks (Africans) in this world. Fact!!! We are breaking bounds, creating records.
cos You are ignorant! since you are interested in greatness, go and learn about Ghanaian greatness from A - Z.
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by oluwapoju(m): 9:59pm On Dec 01, 2016
CrudeGH:
I can see most of you fuelish shitnigerians suffer from schizophrenia.

At least Ghana can "celebrate" stable electricity. What can you shitnigerians celebrate apart from corruption, baby factories, robberies, kidnappings, ritual murders, boko haram, militancy, prostitution? grin grin grin chai,

wao, 90% of you mudder fuggers are mad grin




[s][/s]
buh guy... Your country never pay Nigeria finish for the Gas we supply your country... I could remember last year when naija wanna cut off gas supply to gh..... It was like not saying
Re: Inspite Of Recession Phone Is Cheaper In Nigeria Than Ghana by Papyrus411(m): 10:07pm On Dec 01, 2016
laribari:

okirika you mean? Lol
Yes o. Nobemetalkam oooo...

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