Total Comments 4869 | Start A New Comment
Post Info Comment
Posted By: Chinda

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 425
Northside

You need to oppose with facts. I have stated that division of Nigeria is not the first step. The firts step is to make a real effort at salvaging the situation. As said earlier, we have become too integrated to just dissolve like that. It will be proper we first of all exhaust every opportunity at nation building, by then even God himself will know we have tried. We now can diivide. Northside, you cannot be opposing Biafra based on sentiments unless you are just being silly. What are your reasons?
I dont like people who just make statements. People like me oppose Biafra for the time being because we are yet to examine other avenues. I think this is the stand of Niger Delta people. SNC first before we now divide into preferably North and south and if that dont work, we separate according to Geo-Political zones. What is your own reason attacking Biafra? We shouldnt be childish here
We need to be matured here. I guess you are Hausa man, so tell us what your problem with Biafra is insttead of just attacking anybody who say Biafra because Nigeria cannot go on like this. No way


Posted By: Northside

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 424
Ofeke you lie

Any body can say anything.An Ofeke tells us how hardworking he could be about realizing Bia. The ears are open to all that but are you real? Ofeke is not real.Desire recognition and importance some where else. Better still, tell the forum your real name and how you look. It could be that Kendo will be there too. Yeye.


Posted By: Ofeke

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 492
Will you be there? I will.

An organization known as The Biafran Alliance based in Australia will be marching to the United Nations offices and foreign embassies of several countries to formally acquaint the UN and the various nations about their demand for the return of the sovereignty of the Republic of Biafra.

At 12pm on 16 March, 2012, the Australia-based organization known as The Biafran Alliance will begin its march to the United Nations Headquarters in Canberra, Australia, to submit an application seeking to restore the sovereignty of the Republic of Biafra. Members and supporters are asked to meet at Paul Keating Park in Bankstown at 7am, and then drive in convoy to The Australian Parliament House in Canberra.

An independent state from 1967 to 1970, Biafra was reintegrated into Nigeria after the loss of more than 3.1 million Biafran lives during the Biafran-Nigeria War. Biafra originally seceded from Nigeria due to cultural, religious, and ethnic differences. Now the Biafrans, having not just survived, but persevered in the face of adversity, are now pushing to reinstate the sovereignty of this unique state.

In addition to their march to the United Nations, The Biafran Alliance plans to march to the United States Embassy and the Embassy of Israel to make their case. An application will be submitted to each office requesting support in the global effort to restore Biafra's sovereignty.

The Biafran Alliance is part of a larger global activist group known as Biafra Liberation in Exile (BILIE). The Sydney group has 52 members, and is in the process of opening a branch in Melbourne. Chidi Amagwula one of the coordinators of the march noted that, "Self-determination is a human right and exercising that right is our duty." Amagwula also said that the world's goal to make poverty history cannot be achieved unless peoples' rights to self-determination are assuredly respected. The reinstatement of the Republic of Biafra's sovereignty is one such attempt at respecting that self-determination, he concluded.

Contact, chidibiafra@gmail.com


Posted By: Ofeke

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 487
This was in 2001. What is different now?

Fellow Biafrans, they say one's beating, twice shine. Please read this from Princewill of Niger Delta. This is the total mindset of the Niger deltas. Unfortunately, I am not the type that fall to cheap antics…….


The attention of the officials of the Niger Delta Congress - USA has been drawn to a declaration attributed to Mr. Ralph Uwazuruike of MASSOB (Movement for the Survival of State of Biafra) as contained in the African Abroad Newspaper, New York: Vol. 2, No. 7 (Page 3, 11) of May 17, 2001, captioned "Biafra to have Embassy in Washington" in which he said in response to a question that "he had signed a Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) with the Frontline States such as Rivers, Delta, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, and Bayelsa, to ensure that their collective interests are taken care of." The said article continued: "In the event that a State of Biafra is realized, Mr. Uwazurike suggested that the President should come from Frontline States in order to reassure them of their security"

We wish to put it on record on behalf of our collective peoples both at home and abroad, that in view of the recent recalcitrant provocative acts by MASSOB thugs and hoodlums in Oyigbo, Port Harcourt; it is evident that history is about to be rewritten. It is pertinent to remind Mr. Uwazuruike and his ilk’s that the people of the Niger Delta were the first to canvass for COR State before Biafra, and that Prof. Eyo Ita was the first Leader of Government business in the Eastern Region.

We do not intend to share the dream state of Biafra with our neighbors- the Ibos, in whatever shape or form. We thought Dr. Graham Douglas the eminent jurist, had made that abundantly clear. Therefore, we find the childish offer of Presidency of Biafra by MASSOB a ludicrous affront, tantamount to gobbledygook and at worst an exercise in youthful exuberance.

We consider it apropos to state here categorically that the word "BIAFRA" in any shape or form is a painful reminder of betrayal of trust, greed, oppression, pillage, dubious intelligence, arrogance, callousness and grotesque morass of ethnocentrism. We would only need to recall the Midwest invasion by the rebel forces in 1967 to buttress our point.

The people of the South-South States do not intend to be subjected to the whims and caprices of MASSOB, or any other mushroom organization. We are resolved in realizing the nexus of our mission as contained in the Declaration of Niger Delta Bill of Rights filed with the United Nations. Our determination remain resolute to manage our affairs through self determination with 100% control of our resources. We are a people fighting for Freedom and Justice.

We seize this opportunity to also warn the inept Vice President of the Unitary Republic of Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku, that with the 87% allocation of oil wealth to the center unaccounted for, he should stop denigrating and insulting the South–South Governors fighting for Resource Control.

A Declaration of Niger Delta Republic, culminating from Nigeria's political implosion is a reality that shall come to pass. MASSOB is advised to secure land at ODI, our future capital, for their Biafran Embassy.



Signed: Chief Mpaka Princewill

CHAIRMAN, NIGER DELTA CONGRESS, USA



Posted By: Amadi

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 680
Osman

It does not take a high IQ to fathom the fact that unity and number strengthen a nation. This phenomenon is very effective in US, EU and Germany. But these democratic entities apply rule of law that enhances human and societal developments devoid of ethno-religious bigotries. Unlike in Nigeria where ethno-religious dichotomy and bigotries are prevailng factors. The northern political elites are highly egocentric, islamocentric and ethnocentric and these northern anti-nationalistic phenomenon has been the destructive factor of nigerian existence. Based on these egos, they established a centralized power in a multi- ethnic nation so that they can bondage all groups. Based on these egos, they squandered Niger Delta oil money for 38 years in power and today Nigeria is still in the stone age and people are wallowing in abject poverty and misery. Based on these egos of northern political elites, they established sharia laws which today is breeding islamic terrorism. We still have 3 years to another presidential election and northern political elites instead of being statesmen advising Jonathan are already working against him so that they can grap power in 2015. You Osman, said that the north can survive from agriculture but statistically the north is the worst in societal development and the northern political elites are demanding more money from Niger Delta oil money for survival .So please don't fool me. Instead of living in an illusion of one Nigeria or being hypocritical about one Nigeria and waiting for the doom day, we should allow all the 36 states to be fully independent and the emerging nations could form a union probably called Nigeria. After all, the north can survive from agriculture and they can practise islam to the high heaven or hell in their new nations without the disturbance of southern infidels. Abi ?


Posted By: prophet jj

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 611
NIGERIA

We have lost everything
we met on the land.
Cocoa, palm oil,
groundnuts, cotton,
cashew and rubber have
been forgotten and are
better produced by
nations who came to learn
from us.
We have lost our moral
compass, our society is
fractured, our statehood is
threatened. Our citizens
are in prisons all around
the world. Some of them
prefer foreign prisons to
coming back to Nigeria.
Our passport is treated
with disdain everywhere
you present it.
Why should our Senate
Leader earn 600 million
per year? Why should our
senators earn 30 million
per month? Why should
our National Assembly
gulp 1.2trillion naira per
year while we try to save
1.4 trillion from subsidy
removal ?
Why should our
government be this big
with special advisers on
cassava and beans affairs?
Do we need 36 ministers?
Why would our president
spend close to a billion on
food while close to eighty
percent live on less than a
dollar a day? Why should
he budget a billion for
generators and diesel
when he is urging us to
believe in his power
sector reform?
Why does our President
need 6 private jets? Why
do our governors move
around with twenty-
vehicle convoys while
David Cameron has just
two vehicles and one
outrider?
Why should our politicians
keep their salaries when
Obama slashed his?
Why should we continue
to be wasteful when the
handwriting on the wall
says "danger"? Why
should we believe this
government when it says
the subsidy gain will be
properly reinvested.
Whether you are for or
against subsidy removal,
copy and re-post, tweet,
ping and spread this any
way you can. Bad
leadership and corruption
must stop. This madness
must stop. Nobody will
fight for us if we refuse to
challenge the
government. We are not
slaves.


Posted By: Onuma

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 593
Up Biafra

To (Peter M) please bros are you married? If you do, did you marry your wife by force even when she rejected your hands in marriage?

If you are not married, are you going to marry a girl by force?

Bros we Ndigbo rejected your hands in marriage, marry the north, south west possibly South South & go ahead to restructure your Nigeria as you people wanted her to be. You people should leave us alone.

Who is championing SNC? Hahahah South West I dey hear am. Who will represent who? I still dey laugh oooo! Who is goin to break the law & order? I mean to enforce anarchy in the land in other to make sovereign national conference imperative, So that right representative will emerge? Is it South West will enforce anarchy in the land? Hahahahah.

Long Live my Papa Land Biafra
Long Live my good people


Posted By: EJIOFOR ALISIGWE

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 437
Onyemelukwe: Privatisation Review of Power


Onyemelukwe: Privatisation Review of Power Companies Inevitable

05 Mar 2012
Views: 3,310
Thisdayonline

Group Chairman, Colechurch International Limited, Mr. Clement Onyemelukwe was the founding chief engineer, Electricity Company of Nigeria, before he went back to England to start Colechurch International Ltd in 1977. In this interview with Festus Akanbi, he reviewed the ongoing privatisation of the 11 distribution companies, saying Nigeria will only get value for its investment in the power sector over the years if the entire process is reviewed.

With your experience in the nation's power sector, what do you think about the planned electric power privitisations in Nigeria?

I have recently been monitoring developments in the power projects which the federal government has been working on since 2000. It was in 2000 that we had a major breakdown of the total system and that forced the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo to take over the power system. Then he brought late Bola Ige as the minister. So 2000 was the climax of the failure of the power system that had continued to break down since about 1972 when the defunct National Electric Power Authority came about.

Before that, I was with the British Central Electricity Generating Board in 1961. Shortly after independence, the British then decided that the key posts in the management of Electricity Company of Nigeria (ECN) should be handed over to Nigerians. I was living in the UK. I had my degree in Electrical Engineering followed by Mechanical Engineering in 1956 and I also did a degree in Economics and by that time, I was Head of planning for British Central Electricity Generation Board, responsible for the generation and transmission of electricity for the whole of England and Wales. There was an office of ECN in London and I was invited to a meeting with a delegation from Nigeria asking me to join ECN in Nigeria but I declined. They offered me the position of chief engineer of the ECN.

They then lobbied my parents to prevail on me to return to Nigeria. My mother who I hadn't seen for a long time since 1953 then intervened. So finally, I accepted and returned home. That was how I resumed at ECN in Nigeria as the first Nigerian chief electrical engineer and was the one who selected the 330KV, the present grid for Nigeria. I left when NEPA was being formed and went back to England. In England, I participated in the establishment of Colechurch in 1977, which today, is a major international project promotion/management company.

With your experience, you are eminently qualified to assess the situation in the country today. What is your view about the present situation in the power sector?

Today, I don't want to talk about the whole power programme although I have a lot to say about the whole exercise. I have chosen to discuss it off camera with those responsible because if you go out to state this or that, you will be regarded as the enemy of the government. I want to see if internal discussions could draw attention to these issues. This is why I want to restrict myself to the privatisation and sale of the distribution companies.

So what is your position on the privatisation of the Discos?

I'm worried over the way the ongoing privatisation is being carried out because at the end of the day, it is the distribution companies that eventually transmit power to the consumers. However, the way they are trying to privatise and sell these firms is worrisome. They now want to have 11 private distribution companies, they called them Discos, and they recently got to the point of inviting those that have shown interest in buying these companies and apparently they have made a shortlist of these prospective buyers. They are now at the stage where they are being asked to bring their proposals after issuing them some request for proposals (RFPs) and giving them information on what they are going to buy.

However, I'm not happy with the way the process is going and I have had a short discussion with the director-general of the Bureau of Public Enterprises and my impression is that she is surrounded with things that are difficult for her - I mean bureaucracy and limited technical support. The thing is that when the power system broke down in 2000, the distribution was bad enough, but to me, it is worse today than it was in 2000 and a lot of money has gone into improving this distribution system since 2000 with no apparent results.

If you go into the document which they call the government's electricity roadmap, you will see strings and strings of shopping lists of what they need to buy to reinforce the distribution system and a lot of money has gone into this. The situation is this bad because people who don't have the requisite knowledge have been charged with improving the failed distribution systems. You just don't go to reinforce the distribution system that is already in a bad situation.

You have to correct the bad things first, which itself is an enormous job. If you have a pipe and you want to extend the pipe to connect to more people, the first thing you do if it is a leaking pipe, is to repair the leak because if you don't and you go ahead to extend the pipe, the water won't reach where you plan to take it to. That is the simplest way of explaining the situation now.

So government has been spending huge money, as it can be seen in the power roadmap. But the huge sum spent is not having any effect. The actual quantity of power in terms of kilowatt/hr which consumers receive hasn't significantly improved much since 2000. That is where a lot of some money has gone. They are trying to solve the power programme with the same staff and technical policy which got the power programme (NEPA) in a bad shape as it is today.

But don't you think that privatising the power stations, in view of the failure of government to run the system effectively, will be a good option?

Let me ask you, if you want to sell your old car what will you do? The best thing is to put the car in good shape so that it can attract a good price. Unfortunately, those running the privatisation of distribution companies haven't done that. The power distribution system is in some ways worse today than it was in 2000. They have not resolved this problem and they are now trying to sell the distribution companies. Their request for proposals (RFPs), which they issued to those who want to buy, is a shameful document. It means those presently running this system (distribution) don't even know what they are selling, unable to provide the basic data as to what they are selling.

The data was either incomplete or to some extent sometimes not worth being put down as a system and sometimes misleading. In the document, they even put down a disclaimer that they are not responsible for whatever they put in the document. Expectedly, an astute buyer won't hesitate to put up several conditionalities to protect himself. So it will be easy for such 'lucky' buyers to give excuses later on that they didn't provide for some of the challenges that might crop up later. That is the situation we have at the moment. Because we failed to put the Discos companies in good shape all these years, we may be selling them at a giveaway price.

The other side is that because the authorities don't know the true value of the Discos, they came up with estimates based on the Multi-year Tariff Order (MYTO). They just sat down and assumed that by 2020, Nigeria will have about 40,000 megawatts and put up values that were completely wrongly based. But I have told them that there is no way Nigeria can achieved 40,000 megawatts by 2020. I have said that if you are embarking on a programme of power reform, the first thing is to know where you are starting from.

The first thing is to ask, what loads are on the ground and make a proper skilled future forecast of power demand but this was not done and now they are guessing future power demand after realising that 40,000MW by 2020 was wrong. The prices they are putting on these companies are based on their expectation of 40,000 megawatts by 2020 and they are saying that by the time the people takeover the system, the load might be so and so. But the basis pn which they are trying to form the valuation of these distribution companies is wrong. If you know what you own and you have the data, the statistics, you should know the value of what you want to sell but they don't.

By year 2020, 40,00MW assumes a double digit growth of the economy. I have told some people that if this country achieves even 20,000 megawatts by 2020, I will salute them, not to talk of 40,000 megawatts. That is the assumed valuation they have given international top class companies who may want to buy these companies. It was a jolt and they in turn said we must be joking in this country, saying they were not interested.

Why do you think government has kept on shifting the timetable for the privatisation of these Discos?

The buyers are at a loss on what to do because on the one side, these people selling are raising unrealistic valuations based on these false forecasts and they, from the other side, do not really know what the real value of what these companies are. It is said that they don't know what they are supposed to know. Also they have really not done anything, as I said, to patch up the system to get the value for the huge money expended on them over the years, including the one they pumped in since 2000. There must be the feeling in the system that something is wrong that has led to the shift.

But foreign investors are showing interest. It means you are wrong with your assessment?

We have the feelings that the world revolves round Nigeria. That is not the case. When we see all these people coming to Nigeria, it makes us feel we are at the centre but that is not the case. It is true that a lot of these people - not the top in the world - have been coming, but at the end of the day, what do we see? We have heard of the bulk purchaser who will buy power from the generation companies and if the distribution companies are not able to pay them, the bulk purchaser will have to take the financial risk.

If you are one of the people that bought the distribution companies after all manner of conditionalities in your tender are factored in, and you are told that if you can't break even the bulk purchaser is there and you bring in these Asian countries, they will rob this country dry because it will be easy for them to say they were not able to make profit since the bulk purchaser was guaranteeing them. So where does the country get this kind of money to give the buyers such a blanket concession?

Is the concession (bulk purchaser) not to attract good investors?

The truth is that some of these investors will abuse this concession. They will tell us they are not making profits even when they are. They can capitalise on the terms of the contract because some of the information given them was not reliable, so they have us in their pockets and this defeats the purpose of what we are trying to achieve. There is also this faulty assumption that the foreigners know better about what to do with the situation.

But what we have here is a complicated socio-cultural mess that it may be strange for anybody coming here for the first time. It is not a good assumption that bringing foreigners into the country will do the magic. There is no problem if we are bringing foreigners to own factories here but we are talking of the electricity sector - the country's basic infrastructure. There are security implications we must factor. I'm therefore suggesting we go back to the drawing board on this privatisation to sort out the present mess because the consequences are serious enough.


Posted By: Ozidy

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 466
NDIGBO

Every other tribes in Nigeria called Igbo's all sort of bad names ascribed to describe wicked or bad people. Some call us ritualit's, some call us Igbo kobo kobo, some call us 419, some call us criminals, they called us greed people, money lovers that we love money than any other thing in life. Some said we are barbaric,some said we eat human beings. They said Igbos kill their parents bc of money, we sale or brothers bc of money, etc against us.

Ndigbo said ok we are all this fine, let us go our separate way to go & eat ourselves, to do 419 to ourselves, to go & do koboko in their country, to go & do rituals in their country, to go & kill their fathers & mothers bc of money in their country, to go & love money in their country, to go & sell their brothers bc of money in their country.

These people are the same people who wants Igbos to live together with them in one country after accusing Igbos of being carnivorous, wicked & bad.

All this is amounts to enviousness. After seeing how prosperous & the industriousness of Igbo man other tribes in Nigeria felt they cannot match Igbos in anything human endeavor they ended up in enviousness & jealousy. Does this stop Igbo man? No, more you people hate us more will grow sophisticated.

Biafra struggle has gone beyond what any human being can stop. Biafra is running her government according to UN chatter. Any body can google Biafra embassy in United states of America. Brother (Peter M) please stop counting Igbos as part of your new Nigeria & new leaders. You know Igbos are not known for betrayals bc we do make our stand known from day one.

Long Live Republic of Biafra
Long Live Igbo ndi Oma
Long Live our well wishers


Posted By: Ofeke

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 457
Folks

I do not have any apology to that hater in the name of German Coscus doctor Amadi who talks from two sides of his mouth. If he does not know what to say, he better shut the **** up. Marriage is not out of sympathy, neither by force but out of love. You cannot worship two gods at the same time. Is either you are in or you are out. If you have no base, that makes one baseless and stupid.

Chinda, like I said last time, you have a big role to play starting with those around you. Mind you that the journey to success has never been easy. I am sure that you will attest to it in months and years to come if you are genuine.



Posted By: Ofeke

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 441
Folks

I do not have any apology to that hater in the name of German Coscus doctor Amadi who talks from two sides of his mouth. If he does not know what to say, he better shut the **** up. Marriage is not out of sympathy, neither by force but out of love. You cannot worship two gods at the same time. Is either you are in or you are out. If you have no base, that makes one baseless and stupid.

Chinda, like I said last time, you have a big role to play starting with those around you. Mind you that the journey to success has never been easy. I am sure that you will attest to it in months and years to come if you genuine.



Posted By: Osisi

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 486
Dozie

You mean say Amadi furfather na immigrant across the River Niger? Haahahah

Peter M. Your type in Nigeria are the problems facing this terrorist country. You wants unity without defining the bases of the unity. Igbo man said hoo-ha that he has a dream to actualize which he desperately wants to achieve in Biafra nation. P.M why you people need Igbo man even when Igbo said he don't want to be under the same roof with you people? When someone rejected you P. M & you are forcing your self on him, what will you call yourself?

P.M guy you are still far from peace till you embrace the spirit of leave let leave. We will develop & live in peace till we see ourselves as good neighbors not country man.

P.M why the hole world cannot be in one country?
Do you think the world will not develop if all nations of the world become one country?
P.M so world lose greatness because we are not in one country?

Those who are interested in Nigeria should go & fix her either by changing your leaders or any which way, you people can still do that without Igbo man okay.
P.M is not a curse when you are told to answer your fathers name. Igbo man is tired of being in the mist of unproductive elements & lazy parasites. If you claimed you did not fall in any of this categories, why not leave Igbo man alone & prove yourself?

Long live Biafra.
Long Live Igbo nation


Posted By: Nonie Darwish

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 524
Joys of Muslim Women

Joys of Muslim Women

By Nonie Darwish

In the Muslim faith a Muslim man can marry a child as young as 1 year old and have sexual intimacy with this child. Consummating the marriage by 9, the dowry is given to the family in exchange for the woman (who becomes his slave) and for the purchase of the private parts of the woman, to use her as a toy.

Even though a woman is abused she can not obtain a divorce. To prove rape, the woman must have (4) male witnesses. Often after a woman has been raped, she is returned to her family and the family must return the dowry. The family has the right to execute her (an honour killing) to restore the honour of the family.

Husbands can beat their wives 'at will' and he does not have to say why he has beaten her. The husband is permitted to have (4 wives) and a temporary wife for an hour (prostitute) at his discretion. The Shariah Muslim law controls the private as well as the public life of the woman.

In the West World (America and Britain) Muslim men are starting to demand Shariah Law so the wife can not obtain a divorce and he can have full and complete control of her. It is amazing and alarming how many of our sisters and daughters attending American Universities and British Universities are now marrying Muslim men and submitting themselves and their children unsuspectingly to the Shariah law. By passing this on, enlightened American and British women may avoid becoming a slave under Shariah Law

Author and lecturer Nonie Darwish says the goal of radical Islamists is to impose Shariah law on the world, ripping Western law and liberty in two She recently authored the book, Cruel and Usual Punishment: The Terrifying Global Implications of Islamic Law. Darwish was born in Cairo and spent her childhood in Egypt and Gaza before immigrating to America in 1978, when she was eight years old. Her father died while leading covert attacks on Israel. He was a high-ranking Egyptian military officer stationed with his family in Gaza. When he died, he was considered a "shahid," a martyr for jihad. His posthumous status earned Nonie and her family an elevated position in Muslim society. But Darwish developed a skeptical eye at an early age. She questioned her own Muslim culture and upbringing. She converted to Christianity after hearing a Christian preacher on television. In her latest book, Darwish warns about creeping Shariah law - what it is, what it means, and how it is manifested in Islamic countries.

For the West, she says radical Islamists are working to impose Shariah on the world. If that happens, Western civilization will be destroyed. Westerners generally assume all religions encourage a respect for the dignity of each individual. Islamic law (Shariah) teaches that non-Muslims should be subjugated or killed in this world. Peace and prosperity for one's children is not as important as assuring that Islamic law rules everywhere in the Middle East and eventually in the world. While Westerners tend to think that all religions encourage some form of the golden rule, Shariah teaches two systems of ethics - one for Muslims and another for non-Muslims. Building on tribal practices of the seventh century, Sharia encourages the side of humanity that wants to take from and subjugate others.

While Westerners tend to think in terms of religious people developing a personal understanding of and relationship with God, Shariah advocates executing people who ask difficult questions that could be interpreted as criticism. It's hard to imagine, that in this day and age, Islamic scholars agree that those who criticize Islam or choose to stop being Muslim should be executed. Sadly, while talk of an Islamic reformation is common and even assumed by many in the West, such murmurings in the Middle East are silenced through intimidation.

While Westerners are accustomed to an increase in religious tolerance over time, Darwish explains how petro dollars are being used to grow an extremely intolerant form of political Islam in her native Egypt and elsewhere. (In twenty years there will be enough Muslim voters in the U.S. and Britain To elect the President by themselves! Rest assured they will do so... You can look at how they have taken over several towns in the USA...


(Britain has several cities now totally controlled by Muslims)


Posted By: mazi

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 534
peter

sharap small boy peter. you dont have enough sense. have you read the recent breakdown of allocations? the southeast get 2% of allocations. the lowest number of local government, the lowest number of states. everything the lowest. yet you say such a useless country should continue. e be like say you smoke gbanaa. do hausa or yoruba like this and see if they will not scatter nigeria. if nigeria dont change and treat everybody equally, it should scatter. stupid country


Posted By: Peter M

Posted On: Mar 12, 2012
Views: 494
Ofeke

Hey folks,i am stating here that Nigeria will and should not divide.There is great strength from it diverty and size.One problem we have is that the black race are too divided and always deluded of the fact that they have to be blamed at times for problems they encounter as a nation.My people,i preach for unity and peace.

What we need is a strongh leader and institutions which very lacking in all regions of Nigeria.


Pages [ 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 ] Next Page ->