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Nairaland / General / Re: What Can't You Help But Spend Money On? by Tushed: 10:33pm On Aug 31, 2012
babes
Politics / Profile Of Chief Olusola Oke The Next Governor Of Ondo State(!?) by Tushed: 10:11pm On Aug 10, 2012
Profile of Chief Olusola Oke
Hon. (Chief) Olusola Oke

Born on 7th of April, 1956, in Ilowo a coastal town in Ilaje Local government Area of Ondo State, he attended UNA Primary School, Ode-Ilowo between 1961-1963. Between 1963 and 1973, he engaged in subsistence high sea fishing, a career in which he acquired great fame.

His quest for knowledge compelled him to abandon fishing to the amazement of his fishermen colleagues and returned to Methodist Primary School, Ilepete in 1973 to complete his primary school education. He later proceeded to Methodist Secondary Modern School, Ilepete where he graduated in 1976. He attended Ilaje Grammar School, Atijere, a primary School in Ilaje Local Government where Chief Oke baged his WASC in 1980. Taught briefly as auxiliary Teacher at Happy city college Ayetero, Ilaje Local Government and Methodist High School, Okitipupa.

In October 1981, he was admitted to Ondo State School of Arts and Science, Ikare where he was, when the prestigious University of Ife offered him admission in 1982 to study law.

In 1986 Chief Oke bagged a Degree in Law and proceeded same year to the Nigeria Law School. In 1987, he was called to the Nigeria Bar and enrolled at the Supreme Court as Solicitor and Advocate of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Joined the firm of Chief Olufemi Lanlehin, Ikeja, Lagos, in November 1987 from where he moved to Okitipupa in Ondo State and opened a firm of Solicitors, Olusola Oke & Associate on the 14th of July, 1988. He was later elected into the House of Representatives in 1992 to represent Ilaje/Ese-Odo Federal Constituency. Before this, he was appointed a member, Ondo State Internal Revenue Board. In 2000, the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria appointed and inaugurated him as a commissioner representing Ondo State on the Governing Board of NDDC where he served meritoriously for four years. In 2005, he was appointed by the President as member of the National Political Reform Conference. While there, the Ondo State Government appointed him as the Chairman and CEO of Ondo State Oil Producing Area Development Commission (OSOPADEC) a position he held until he voluntarily resigned in October, 2006 to run for PDP ticket for Ondo South Senatorial District. At the primary election, he was returned as candidate having secured not less than 75% of the votes cast in a race involving three (3) aspirants. He also campaigned for the general election and scored 318,000 votes. His victory was aborted by intra-party mischief which was endorsed by the Supreme Court in July 2008.

Before the decision of the Supreme Court upholding his supplant by a loser, he had contested and won party election as the National Legal Adviser of our great party, a position he now occupies. He is a member of the recently constituted Technical committee on Niger Delta
[b]Profile of Chief Olusola Oke
Hon. (Chief) Olusola Oke

Born on 7th of April, 1956, in Ilowo a coastal town in Ilaje Local government Area of Ondo State, he attended UNA Primary School, Ode-Ilowo between 1961-1963. Between 1963 and 1973, he engaged in subsistence high sea fishing, a career in which he acquired great fame.

His quest for knowledge compelled him to abandon fishing to the amazement of his fishermen colleagues and returned to Methodist Primary School, Ilepete in 1973 to complete his primary school education. He later proceeded to Methodist Secondary Modern School, Ilepete where he graduated in 1976. He attended Ilaje Grammar School, Atijere, a primary School in Ilaje Local Government where Chief Oke baged his WASC in 1980. Taught briefly as auxiliary Teacher at Happy city college Ayetero, Ilaje Local Government and Methodist High School, Okitipupa.

In October 1981, he was admitted to Ondo State School of Arts and Science, Ikare where he was, when the prestigious University of Ife offered him admission in 1982 to study law.

In 1986 Chief Oke bagged a Degree in Law and proceeded same year to the Nigeria Law School. In 1987, he was called to the Nigeria Bar and enrolled at the Supreme Court as Solicitor and Advocate of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Joined the firm of Chief Olufemi Lanlehin, Ikeja, Lagos, in November 1987 from where he moved to Okitipupa in Ondo State and opened a firm of Solicitors, Olusola Oke & Associate on the 14th of July, 1988. He was later elected into the House of Representatives in 1992 to represent Ilaje/Ese-Odo Federal Constituency. Before this, he was appointed a member, Ondo State Internal Revenue Board. In 2000, the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria appointed and inaugurated him as a commissioner representing Ondo State on the Governing Board of NDDC where he served meritoriously for four years. In 2005, he was appointed by the President as member of the National Political Reform Conference. While there, the Ondo State Government appointed him as the Chairman and CEO of Ondo State Oil Producing Area Development Commission (OSOPADEC) a position he held until he voluntarily resigned in October, 2006 to run for PDP ticket for Ondo South Senatorial District. At the primary election, he was returned as candidate having secured not less than 75% of the votes cast in a race involving three (3) aspirants. He also campaigned for the general election and scored 318,000 votes. His victory was aborted by intra-party mischief which was endorsed by the Supreme Court in July 2008.

Before the decision of the Supreme Court upholding his supplant by a loser, he had contested and won party election as the National Legal Adviser of our great party, a position he now occupies. He is a member of the recently constituted Technical committee on Niger Delta
[/b]Profile of Chief Olusola Oke
Hon. (Chief) Olusola Oke

Born on 7th of April, 1956, in Ilowo a coastal town in Ilaje Local government Area of Ondo State, he attended UNA Primary School, Ode-Ilowo between 1961-1963. Between 1963 and 1973, he engaged in subsistence high sea fishing, a career in which he acquired great fame.

His quest for knowledge compelled him to abandon fishing to the amazement of his fishermen colleagues and returned to Methodist Primary School, Ilepete in 1973 to complete his primary school education. He later proceeded to Methodist Secondary Modern School, Ilepete where he graduated in 1976. He attended Ilaje Grammar School, Atijere, a primary School in Ilaje Local Government where Chief Oke baged his WASC in 1980. Taught briefly as auxiliary Teacher at Happy city college Ayetero, Ilaje Local Government and Methodist High School, Okitipupa.

In October 1981, he was admitted to Ondo State School of Arts and Science, Ikare where he was, when the prestigious University of Ife offered him admission in 1982 to study law.

In 1986 Chief Oke bagged a Degree in Law and proceeded same year to the Nigeria Law School. In 1987, he was called to the Nigeria Bar and enrolled at the Supreme Court as Solicitor and Advocate of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Joined the firm of Chief Olufemi Lanlehin, Ikeja, Lagos, in November 1987 from where he moved to Okitipupa in Ondo State and opened a firm of Solicitors, Olusola Oke & Associate on the 14th of July, 1988. He was later elected into the House of Representatives in 1992 to represent Ilaje/Ese-Odo Federal Constituency. Before this, he was appointed a member, Ondo State Internal Revenue Board. In 2000, the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria appointed and inaugurated him as a commissioner representing Ondo State on the Governing Board of NDDC where he served meritoriously for four years. In 2005, he was appointed by the President as member of the National Political Reform Conference. While there, the Ondo State Government appointed him as the Chairman and CEO of Ondo State Oil Producing Area Development Commission (OSOPADEC) a position he held until he voluntarily resigned in October, 2006 to run for PDP ticket for Ondo South Senatorial District. At the primary election, he was returned as candidate having secured not less than 75% of the votes cast in a race involving three (3) aspirants. He also campaigned for the general election and scored 318,000 votes. His victory was aborted by intra-party mischief which was endorsed by the Supreme Court in July 2008.

Before the decision of the Supreme Court upholding his supplant by a loser, he had contested and won party election as the National Legal Adviser of our great party, a position he now occupies. He is a member of the recently constituted Technical committee on Niger Delta
Business / Re: Why Is Gtbank Naira Mastercard Not Working On Facebook & Google Advertisement by Tushed: 10:38pm On Jul 12, 2012
try Zenith Visa Card
Business / Re: Best Nigerian Bank For UK Returnee Back To Naija by Tushed: 12:40pm On May 24, 2012
ZENITH .
Phones / Re: Qwerty Or Touchscreen Phones Which Do You Prefer? by Tushed: 5:27am On Mar 05, 2012
Touch screen!
Romance / Re: Why Do Good Guys Always Lose Out? by Tushed: 12:30am On Jan 14, 2012
Mrs, Chima:

Let the ladies speak for themselves. wink

@Mrs Chima speak for the ladies
Romance / Re: Why Do Good Guys Always Lose Out? by Tushed: 12:01am On Jan 14, 2012
grin grin grin grin grin grin
You dont know ladies' psychology. ladies dont want good guys, they want 'BADASS' guys
Politics / Re: El Rufai Call For 400% Hike In Electricty Tariff by Tushed: 11:29pm On Jan 13, 2012
It's unfortunate they right statements are coming from the wrong quarters nowadays. i must confess that our tarrif is cheap, and Nigerian dont even mind 300% increase really. What they want is stable Electricity. Even if they are from a Nuclear powered sites!
Religion / Re: 200 Pastors Resign From Oyedepo's Winners Chapel by Tushed: 11:10pm On Jan 13, 2012
Its' time the Church starts paying their taxes as Jesus recommended!
Nairaland / General / Deregulation The Devil's Alternative by Tushed: 11:48pm On Jan 07, 2012
DEREGULATION, THE DEVILS ALTERNATIVE



I owe to my country to submit the bitter truth about final the deregulation of the downstream petroleum sector. Mind you we're talking Economics here, not Legal or political issue. In 2011, Nigeria depleted the excess crude account, withdrew massively from the external reserve and borrowed locally to finance the subsidy. The labour demanded for and got the minimum wage across board, the government have to pay through its nose. We have our president to blame for not having the Federation balance sheet published. We have the GEJ led administration to blame for not showing enough patriotism by reducing the overheads of public officer holders and the security votes in 2012 appropriation bill despite the fact the finances of the State is in state of mess. GEJ cannot just choose to inflict hardship on Nigerian for no just cause. For what reason? He just did not know how to convince an average Nigerian of his sincerity. We all be believe and know politics and public office holding is the cheapest route to affluence. Prior to now we voted in leaders partly because we believe its our civic right. So we don't trust them as the agent change we need. Mr President has been singing it that it would be the rate determine painful step to our economic liberty, no ones seemed to pay attention. My people perish for lack of knowledge.

Now what the labour and the activist need is enlightenment. They need to ask questions on how the removal will work? A typity was what happened in the telecom sector in 1999 when a SIM card sold for 35,000NGN.
Fellow Nigerians let me submit here that deregulation is a necessary evil and as far as our Economy is concerned capitalism is the best alternative. In the oil sector,the federal government has agencies like DPR and PPRA whose roles are regulatory as in the role of NCC in the telecoms sector.

Here is the brief analysis of how the economy will fare in this post-subsidy era. The prices of goods and services will rise, initially. Now because fuel is not the only input we have in utility creation the percentage rise in average prices will be less than percentage increase in fuel price. With the minimum wage and increase in the average wage of Nigerian the inflationary effect would have been cushioned. By the time we have stable electricity we would only need PMS to run fewer and fewer machines. As investors move to rapidly to the refining sector that would have been attractive by then, more jobs would be created.As more and more refineries spring ups healthy rivalry(perfect competition) would have set in, and this would force the price of PMS down to well below 100NGN / litre . Moreso that the cost of shiping to and from refineries overseas would have been eliminated. The cost of labour would definitely the paid to Nigerian! And of course refining locally would make all fractions obtained from crude oil available at cheap rate in Nigerian market!
I doubt if these activist are illumed about what we have missed over the years by refining the black gold outside Nigeria. Here are the immediate fractions:

Liquified petroleum gas (LPG)
Gasoline (also known as petrol)
Naphtha
Kerosene and related jet aircraft fuels
Diesel fuel
Fuel oils
Lubricating oils
Paraffin wax
Asphalt and tar
Petroleum coke

Oil refineries also produce various intermediate products such as hydrogen, light hydrocarbons, reformate and pyrolysis gasoline. These are not usually transported but instead are blended or processed further on-site. Chemical plants are thus often adjacent to oil refineries. For example, light hydrocarbons are steam-cracked in an ethylene plant, and the produced ethylene is polymerized to produce polyethene. Imagine! All the Electronics companies in the world use PVC casing derived from crude oil! All our phone, electronics, cars etc all have crude oil products and derivatives in them all our polythene bags, our synthetic fibre clothing materials. I doubt if the labour unions know that the hair attachments and weave-ons are from the petroleum products. All these cars that are running around have at least five litres of lubricants in them. Why don't they protest against that?
Last year or thereabout Dunlop closed down as a result of high cost diesel that has been deregulated prior to now and no one protesed the loss of thousand of job and mandate the FG to provide the company with stable electricity. Meanwhile synthetic rubber which is alternative to natural rubber can be gotten from refining crude oil locally.
Our tyres,electric cables insulators, shoes etc are made of synthetic petroleum products and no one protests. Thousands of shops are closing down for lack of stable electricity and no one is protesting.

Our problems are lack of infrastructure especially ELECTRICITY and others like good road networks. The almighty CORRUPTION that has eaten deep into the mind of an average Nigerian would not allow speedy development of basic amenities. Lack of INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT development due to importation( very soon we will be importing bottled water!) The deregulation will touch all these issues, although it might not be able to fully address them.

Let’s talk about Labour unions. ASUU members should be ashamed of themself. What contribution have they made since 1960? We all depend on foreign technonology!. This is a time of reflection. What are the public servants doing? Nothing . What are the publc school teachers doing? Is everyone doing his bit well? Look @ the police. Are we expecting GEJ to perform magic? Where is NITEL, NIPOST, NRC, FRSC, Nothing public is working! Why is it that government is don’t run any business successfully here? Nigerians run it down. Now it’s the time to deregulate every sector of the economy!

I tell you most filling station around here are selling the fuel they lifted and hoarded about a month ago at post-subsidy removal price now. The question is; is it GEJ that told them to sell at that super-profit rate? No. Nigerians are taking advantage of Nigerians and we're blaming the government. Our major problem is corruption. Corruption is part of our system in this nation, from the the peasant to the presidency. The cartels that are importing this PMS and benefiting from it; don't NLC know them? For over 50 yrs that we have been subsidizing PMS what progress have we made? Nigerians should know that the economy of the world has changed. We must sacrifice for a while in order to reap the long term benefits. And President GEJ, how can you convince Nigerians that you're sincere when you budgeted 1BILLION for food?


And now today he reduced public servants’ pay by 25%. How responsive do you want him to be?
We asked for minimum wage he granted it. What else do you want him to do?



Now I urge you not to protest ignorantly against deregulation. Rather I urge you to vote this government out if at the end of 2012 we do not have our roads been fixed, power sector being deregulated, our trains back on track. For God's sake ten of thousands jobs are to created at the Railways Corporation.

On the final note, I am confident that majority of the protesters do not have access to data on the long term and 'eternal' benefits of deregulation, while some are aware and are just interested in the publicity the protest would give to their political ambition. Nigeria is ours. If we allow this powerful cartel to run down the economy by getting 1 trillion NGN annually from FGN under the guise of subsidy and parading themselves as the African richest men ( Mind you it is the same cartel that defrauded Nigerian in the stock market a few years ago through price fixing and the naive labour failed to protest), if we do not trust GEJ enough( despite voting for him) to deregulate the determinant sector of our economy, he will obey the masses who voted him in as a true democrat, embezzle as much as he can ( like his predecessors), leave the economy in a state worse than he met it,and the economy will end up where it is heading:ruin!
( An Article tiltle; DEREGULATION THE DEVILS ALTERNATIVE by Biodun Oja)
Politics / Re: Fela Durotoye On Fuel Subsidy Removal: Brilliant! by Tushed: 2:18am On Jan 07, 2012
maasoap:

Fuel subsidy was not killing our economy, but corruption, high cost of governance as well as wasteful spending. 300 billion naira fuel subsidy suddenly jumped to 1.3 trillion naira under GEJ in two years. There is no way we can trust this administration.


I'm telling you, you have said it all, subsidy or no subsidy is not our problem. Removal of subsidy is like we want to contribute extra 75 naira on every litre of PMS we buy to develop our economy faster. Simple. And Fela and co are saying the little we have the corrupt politicians are spending it lavishly! Of course yes.

We do not have any iota of trust in our rulers because their lifestyle does not portend they have our interest at heart. An it is a pity
Politics / Re: Live Debate On Fuel Subsidy Removal On Channels Tv At 8pm by Tushed: 10:45pm On Jan 04, 2012
the minister was still on his way five minutes to 9 pm,
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin
Politics / Re: Atiku Skips OBJ In His Protocol List At Yar'Adua's Memorial Lecture by Tushed: 10:17pm On Dec 12, 2011
Alh Atiku has been very undiplomatic recently, and that is a political arsenic he swallowing,
Celebrities / Re: Blackface Forcefully Ejected From Apartment (Pic) by Tushed: 10:40pm On Dec 06, 2011
Have n't you guys heard,that talent is not enough?
Travel / Re: Obudu Cattle Ranch, Calabar-picture Gallery by Tushed: 10:21pm On Dec 06, 2011
with about 20k you can say up the ranch for a night, there are local pple on the ranch too. You can come down the plataueu for a cheap hotel, and so on depending on your purse
Computers / Re: Laptop With Longest Battery Life by Tushed: 10:46pm On Nov 28, 2011
muyoto:

using the DVD player, for instance, will surely drain the battery life than 50%, irrespective of what the manufacturers claim.

It all depends on how much power you're draining from the battery
Nairaland / General / Re: Things Nigerians Invented: by Tushed: 9:47pm On Nov 26, 2011
sachet water, called pure water!
TV/Movies / Re: Who Would You Pick For James Bond In Nigeria? by Tushed: 10:45pm On Nov 20, 2011
which kind mumu-mumu topic be dis?
Politics / Where Is Dimeji Bankole? by Tushed: 1:17am On Sep 03, 2011
Please Nairalanders where is our erstwhile speaker Dimeji Bankole?. I argued with someone yesterday that he is still in EFCC's net. What is the latest on his trial? I sincerely hope I get answers here. Thank you
Computers / Re: Get This Movie And More; Transformer 3. by Tushed: 9:48pm On Aug 13, 2011
pally there's nothing there
Literature/Writing Ads / Re: Get Sydney Sheldon, John Grisham And Other Interesting Novels For Free! by Tushed: 4:00am On Jul 16, 2011
i need the firm sir =biodunoja@live.com
Literature/Writing Ads / Re: I Need Cool Writers :-) by Tushed: 3:54am On Jul 16, 2011
talk to Behind on +234-O-7O3-293-7777 for serious business
Autos / Re: Mistibushi Mirage Forsale 300k by Tushed: 12:32am On Jan 20, 2011
these pix are blurred
Career / Re: What Is Really Wrong With Intercontinental Bank? by Tushed: 4:19am On Jan 07, 2011
Can someone say something about Zenith?
Autos / Re: I Need A Toyota Rav 4 by Tushed: 10:18pm On Jan 05, 2011
like yr 2000-2001
Autos / I Need A Toyota Rav 4 by Tushed: 11:16pm On Jan 01, 2011
GOODAY ALL

PLS I NEED A TOYOTA RAV4. I KNOW THE PRICE WOULD VARY WITH MODEL
KINDLY FURNISH ME WITH MODELS AVAILABLE AND THEIR RESPECTIVE PRICES

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