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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by mercyville: 10:07pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
totit:
It's even am insult to compare Ibadan with these palm wine villages called SE of a region. I wonder o,my Bruv. It is like comparing USA(Yorubaland) with Namibia(Igboland). Igboland is so tiny and slummy with a few modern houses. |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:08pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
deomelo:
This is your dirty ipob village and how you people live like pigs. Leave that kid O'jare. I wonder how much he's making from the shop he and his two brothers are running that he can afford to toll the whole of Ibadan as a whole ..like WTF!!! The kid is even pulling off stats that they share among themselves often 1 Like |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by mercyville: 10:09pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
JubrilBuhari:
Here they comes! Another skull slamming omonile nonentity on the loose. Let's do the comparison and leave stupidity for kids.
Bring it on! Anambra vs Ogun. Let's flow!!! Okay,ojuku... Bayo Ogunlesi |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:11pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
mercyville:
I wonder o,my Bruv. It is like comparing USA(Yorubaland) with Namibia(Igboland). Igboland is so tiny and slummy with a few modern houses. If you have a foresight and fast thinking brain it's not to hard to disgrace and embarrass those villagers with superior argument. Like WTF was that ...as if Ibadan was a local gov or one tiny Enugu |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by marosmart(m): 10:13pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
Okoyeeboz:
Yeah yeah. Bring it on.
Since you refused to learn from GEJ's stupidity in insulting Yorubas, we would teach you the lesson your parents failed to give you.
Any Yoruba person who votes for Peter Obi is a bastard.
are you sure you take your medicine |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:15pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
I served in Oyo we've discussed this before, so no need of garnishing your lies Even if you spend 2years in Ibadan you can't explore the whole of Oyo state. Besides , shouldn't your brain whisper to you that as member you were meant to serve the rural community of the state and not urban?? Abeg Ool Na wa ooo |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by deomelo: 10:18pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
My friend deomelo you don dey fear Onitsha, World's Dirtiest City
Approaching Okpoko market through thick smog on the back of an okada (motorcycle taxi), the natural reaction is to cover your nose to protect yourself from the dust storm – but the effort is futile.
When a lorry zooms past, kicking up yet another red cloud of dirt, a trader turns the head of a sleeping toddler away from the road, a protective act that is as poignant as it is pointless.
This is a typical day in the southern Nigerian port city of Onitsha – which last year gained notoriety when it was ranked the worst city in the world for the staggering levels of PM10 particulate matter in its air.
Onitsha’s mean annual concentration was recorded at 594 micrograms per cubic metre by the World Health Organization – massively exceeding the WHO’s annual guideline limit for PM10s of 20μg/m3.
PM10 refers to coarse dust particles between 10 and 2.5 micrometres in diameter, while PM2.5s are even finer and more dangerous when inhaled, settling deep in a person’s lungs. Sources of both include dust storms, gases emitted by vehicles, all types of combustion, and industrial activities such as cement manufacturing, construction, mining and smelting. Onitsha scores highly on most of the above – as do other rapidly growing Nigerian cities such as Kaduna, Aba and Umuahia, all of which also featured in the WHO’s 20 worst offenders for PM10s.
In Onitsha’s very busy Okpoko market, my air quality monitor registers 140 for PM10s and 70 for PM2.5s – all way over recommended healthy levels, but still nothing compared to the readings triggered in other parts of this densely populated commercial and industrial hub.
The entire vicinity of the market is perpetually dusty, as wood-sellers saw lumber into different shapes and sizes. The air here is made worse by all the fine sand particles that fly off the back of trucks as they visit one of the many dredging companies on the bank of the River Niger, just behind the wood market.
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/feb/13/polluted-onitsha-nigeria-perpetual-dust-city-world-worst-air ^^^^^^^^ that's what the UN said about your dirty and stinking village...At the end of the day, this is your daily reality... |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by deomelo: 10:22pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
Below Google map of Ibadan and Onitsha, you can see how planned Onitsha is when compare backward city
1 Ibadan 2 Onitsha 3 Onitsha Onitsha, World's Dirtiest City
Approaching Okpoko market through thick smog on the back of an okada (motorcycle taxi), the natural reaction is to cover your nose to protect yourself from the dust storm – but the effort is futile.
When a lorry zooms past, kicking up yet another red cloud of dirt, a trader turns the head of a sleeping toddler away from the road, a protective act that is as poignant as it is pointless.
This is a typical day in the southern Nigerian port city of Onitsha – which last year gained notoriety when it was ranked the worst city in the world for the staggering levels of PM10 particulate matter in its air.
Onitsha’s mean annual concentration was recorded at 594 micrograms per cubic metre by the World Health Organization – massively exceeding the WHO’s annual guideline limit for PM10s of 20μg/m3.
PM10 refers to coarse dust particles between 10 and 2.5 micrometres in diameter, while PM2.5s are even finer and more dangerous when inhaled, settling deep in a person’s lungs. Sources of both include dust storms, gases emitted by vehicles, all types of combustion, and industrial activities such as cement manufacturing, construction, mining and smelting. Onitsha scores highly on most of the above – as do other rapidly growing Nigerian cities such as Kaduna, Aba and Umuahia, all of which also featured in the WHO’s 20 worst offenders for PM10s.
In Onitsha’s very busy Okpoko market, my air quality monitor registers 140 for PM10s and 70 for PM2.5s – all way over recommended healthy levels, but still nothing compared to the readings triggered in other parts of this densely populated commercial and industrial hub.
The entire vicinity of the market is perpetually dusty, as wood-sellers saw lumber into different shapes and sizes. The air here is made worse by all the fine sand particles that fly off the back of trucks as they visit one of the many dredging companies on the bank of the River Niger, just behind the wood market.
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/feb/13/polluted-onitsha-nigeria-perpetual-dust-city-world-worst-air ^^^^^^^^ that's what the UN said about your dirty and stinking village...This is your planned onisha village |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by deomelo: 10:30pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
I no you are pained fact no state in west can be compare to Anambra Onitsha, World's Dirtiest City
Approaching Okpoko market through thick smog on the back of an okada (motorcycle taxi), the natural reaction is to cover your nose to protect yourself from the dust storm – but the effort is futile.
When a lorry zooms past, kicking up yet another red cloud of dirt, a trader turns the head of a sleeping toddler away from the road, a protective act that is as poignant as it is pointless.
This is a typical day in the southern Nigerian port city of Onitsha – which last year gained notoriety when it was ranked the worst city in the world for the staggering levels of PM10 particulate matter in its air.
Onitsha’s mean annual concentration was recorded at 594 micrograms per cubic metre by the World Health Organization – massively exceeding the WHO’s annual guideline limit for PM10s of 20μg/m3.
PM10 refers to coarse dust particles between 10 and 2.5 micrometres in diameter, while PM2.5s are even finer and more dangerous when inhaled, settling deep in a person’s lungs. Sources of both include dust storms, gases emitted by vehicles, all types of combustion, and industrial activities such as cement manufacturing, construction, mining and smelting. Onitsha scores highly on most of the above – as do other rapidly growing Nigerian cities such as Kaduna, Aba and Umuahia, all of which also featured in the WHO’s 20 worst offenders for PM10s.
In Onitsha’s very busy Okpoko market, my air quality monitor registers 140 for PM10s and 70 for PM2.5s – all way over recommended healthy levels, but still nothing compared to the readings triggered in other parts of this densely populated commercial and industrial hub.
The entire vicinity of the market is perpetually dusty, as wood-sellers saw lumber into different shapes and sizes. The air here is made worse by all the fine sand particles that fly off the back of trucks as they visit one of the many dredging companies on the bank of the River Niger, just behind the wood market.
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/feb/13/polluted-onitsha-nigeria-perpetual-dust-city-world-worst-air ^^^^^^^^ that's what the UN said about your dirty and stinking village...This is your planned onisha village
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:32pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:33pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:38pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
South east people should quite hating on the new Ibadan and better SW. Selective few good pictures from SE and the bad ones from SW is being partial. 1 Like |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by Okoyeeboz: 10:40pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
marosmart: are you sure you take your medicine Direct your stupid question to those who own you. |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by mercyville: 10:40pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
totit:
If you have a foresight and fast thinking brain it's not to hard to disgrace and embarrass those villagers with superior argument. Like WTF was that ...as if Ibadan was a local gov or one tiny Enugu All the good buildings in Igboland are not even up to half of the modern buildings in Ibadan. |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:45pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
This is real Ibadan, Onitsha map I posted didn't cover all the areas especially new developing areas and gra I agree. But take a look at what I found below having a closer look on the same screen shot your provided. So, relax we are still on the same page. Enjoy |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:46pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
This is real Ibadan, Onitsha map I posted didn't cover all the areas especially new developing areas and gra Relax!!!!! I know you go to school, you are from enugugu do you think its possible to cover the whole of Ibadan on a screen shot?? Common ! now let's apply common sense here abeg. And beside, my scree shot was I'm support of yours its just that I went deeper so that people can see how beautiful Ibadan is truly is. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by mercyville: 10:47pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
I no you are pained fact no state in west can be compare to Anambra Show us real city not the pangolin you are posting. I will take you serious when Igboland becomes a city like thus Ibadan picture: |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by totit: 10:48pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
mercyville:
All the good buildings in Igboland are not even up to half of the modern buildings in Ibadan. So glad you quit the comparing the two. It's kinda downgrading comparing ibadan to these village. Thanks bro 1 Like |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by sogodihno: 11:05pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
Coneheads are very funny, suffering and smiling use your IGR and rebuild dilapidated and mud enclave you called city but how come your brother will rather die under that mud enclave than under ur Aluminium in your landlocked region. 1 Like |
Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by mercyville: 11:05pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
BeautifulMind2:
Below Google map of Ibadan and Onitsha, you can see how planned Onitsha is when compare backward city
1 Ibadan 2 Onitsha 3 Onitsha lol The Ibadan map still beats that of your tiny and unproductive Onitsha. You see your life? That is the tiny Onitsha being compared to giant Ibadan o.Ibadan that is even more developed than all their Igboland.Ojukus are really nuts. |
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Re: Aftermath Of Atiku & Peter Obi's Campaign In Ibadan by deomelo: 11:07pm On Dec 11, 2018 |
Onitsha, World's Dirtiest City
Approaching Okpoko market through thick smog on the back of an okada (motorcycle taxi), the natural reaction is to cover your nose to protect yourself from the dust storm – but the effort is futile.
When a lorry zooms past, kicking up yet another red cloud of dirt, a trader turns the head of a sleeping toddler away from the road, a protective act that is as poignant as it is pointless.
This is a typical day in the southern Nigerian port city of Onitsha – which last year gained notoriety when it was ranked the worst city in the world for the staggering levels of PM10 particulate matter in its air.
Onitsha’s mean annual concentration was recorded at 594 micrograms per cubic metre by the World Health Organization – massively exceeding the WHO’s annual guideline limit for PM10s of 20μg/m3.
PM10 refers to coarse dust particles between 10 and 2.5 micrometres in diameter, while PM2.5s are even finer and more dangerous when inhaled, settling deep in a person’s lungs. Sources of both include dust storms, gases emitted by vehicles, all types of combustion, and industrial activities such as cement manufacturing, construction, mining and smelting. Onitsha scores highly on most of the above – as do other rapidly growing Nigerian cities such as Kaduna, Aba and Umuahia, all of which also featured in the WHO’s 20 worst offenders for PM10s.
In Onitsha’s very busy Okpoko market, my air quality monitor registers 140 for PM10s and 70 for PM2.5s – all way over recommended healthy levels, but still nothing compared to the readings triggered in other parts of this densely populated commercial and industrial hub.
The entire vicinity of the market is perpetually dusty, as wood-sellers saw lumber into different shapes and sizes. The air here is made worse by all the fine sand particles that fly off the back of trucks as they visit one of the many dredging companies on the bank of the River Niger, just behind the wood market.
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/feb/13/polluted-onitsha-nigeria-perpetual-dust-city-world-worst-air ^^^^^^^^ that's what the UN said about your dirty and stinking village...This is your planned onisha village
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