Stats: 3,181,701 members, 7,914,899 topics. Date: Thursday, 08 August 2024 at 01:10 PM |
Nairaland Forum / Wheezy1111's Profile / Wheezy1111's Posts
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Still available for rehoming. |
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Sorry about this. Please mods @mynd44 @lalasticlala move to the front page. Modified: Mods kindly move this to front page and help the victim. lalasticlala |
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OP, do you stay in Abuja or it's environs? Would you like a Veterinarian to come and assist you?? |
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More pics
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Unfathomable: The joy of a pet owner. Get yourself an adorable Lhasa pup just like mine. Hold on! that's not all. The package comes with free 3 months treatment offer, including free vaccinations! Yes, absolutely FREE! Nationwide delivery (pay on delivery). Whatsapp contact: 0802three six zero zero four
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na even 1 credit unit sef, me I can't kill myself |
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@ mynd44 ,this post violates rule no. 8:- do not post false information on Nairaland |
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boldaslion: please check the link : http://saharareporters.com/2019/01/29/nigeria-rises-corruption-perception-index-—-more-needs-be-done |
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Nigeria has moved up four places in the ranking of countries on the 2018 Transparency International Corruption Perception Index. This was contained in a report by the organisation, published on Tuesday. While Nigeria ranked 148 in 2017, the country moved up four places to 144 in 2018. Other countries on the same ranking as Nigeria on the 2018 index are Comoros, Guatemala, Kenya and Mauritania. According to Patricia Moreira, Managing Director of Transparency International, more needs to be done to "strengthen checks and balances and protect citizens' rights". According to the report, the 2018 Corruption Perceptions Index "reveals that the continued failure of most countries to significantly control corruption is contributing to a crisis of democracy around the world". “With many democratic institutions under threat across the globe — often by leaders with authoritarian or populist tendencies — we need to do more to strengthen checks and balances and protect citizens’ rights. Corruption chips away at democracy to produce a vicious cycle, where corruption undermines democratic institutions and, in turn, weak institutions are less able to control corruption.” Moreira, said. Adapted from Sahara reporters http://saharareporters.com/2019/01/29/nigeria-rises-corruption-perception-index-—-more-needs-be-done |
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Breaking: The House of Representatives has approved N30,000 as the new national minimum wage. The approval was agreed upon during the plenary session on Tuesday. The House also adopted the report of the ad hoc committee which was set up to look into the bill earlier presented by President Muhammadu Buhari. On Monday, a public hearing was held on the minimum wage bill, during which stakeholders presented various positions on the adoption of a new minimum wage figure. Two clauses, however, exist. First, it takes effect from the date the President gives assent. Secondly, based on an earlier clause, companies with less than 25 people are excluded from being covered by the provisions of the bill. The bill has been referred to the necessary committees for action, as well as the Senate. The House of Representatives, afterwards, adjourned plenary till February 19, 2019. More to follow.. SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORK LABOR/WORKERS' RIGHTS BREAKING NEWS 1 Like |
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President Muhammadu Buhari has arrived Bauchi, capital of Bauchi state, where a windstorm on Saturday destroyed many buildings and schools. https://www.google.com.ng/amp/s/www.vanguardngr.com/2018/06/breaking-buhari-visits-storm-ravaged-bauchi/amp/ 1 Like
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Workers of the three Colleges of Education in Kwara have started an indefinite industrial action. The workers have accused the state government of failing to meet their five-point demands. A week ago, the workers under the aegis of Committee of Unions of Tertiary Institutions (CUTI) of Colleges of Education in Kwara, issued three days warning to the government. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that academic activities have been paralysed in the institutions located in Ilorin, Oro and Lafiagi. Abdulhammed Yusuf, Secretary, Senior Staff Union of Colleges of Education in the state, told NAN on Wednesday in Ilorin that the union presented a five-point demand which the government allegedly failed to honour. He said the demands include the release of funds for accreditation of courses, payment of backlog of salaries, 30 per cent salary increment, promotion and payment of promotion benefits that accrued since 2013. “In the last three years or so, there is hardly any year that we have not gone on strike. In fact, it seems the government is not ready to do anything except we go on strike. “Last month, it was with some efforts before the government paid us May 2017 salary, as it is, the government still owes us the salary of June and July 2017 here in College of Education, Ilorin,’’ Mr Yusuf said. The union leader also said the government was paying lip service to the issue of accreditation of courses run by the schools. “We have many demands on the ground for the government; apart from salary, there is an issue of accreditation. “Most of the courses in the colleges have not been accredited, it means the students are just coming in running programmes that are not accredited. “The implication is that they will carry worthless certificates around if eventually, they finish here without accreditation. “In order to prevent this, we make it one of our cardinal points that government must address, they must accredit all these courses so that the students will not suffer. “Invariably, if the courses are not accredited, after sometimes, the news will soon spread that courses being run by tertiary institutions in Kwara are not accredited, which means people will start withdrawing their children from the colleges,’’ he said. On the demand for salary increment, Mr Yusuf explained that Kwara was the only state still paying 70 per cent of the approved salary scale for staff of the colleges. Reacting, Muideen Akorede, Senior Special Assistant to Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed on Media and Communications, said the government was yet to receive official notice on the strike. “We are yet to receive official notification of the strike. However, we hope the lecturers and workers will continue to employ dialogue with the government on these matters as strikes don’t solve problems,’’ Mr Akorede told NAN.
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wheezy1111: is public holiday a valid excuse? |
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The Presidency says the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) will not hold tomorrow June 20th. Presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, in a statement today June 19th, said this was "due to the Eid-el-Fitr holidays last Friday and yesterday, which affected preparation of Council memoranda." Adesina has also confirmed that President Buhari would sign the 2018 Appropriation Bill at noon tomorrow. Culled from Linda Ikeji's blog.
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