Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts

Monday, 31 October 2016

Make 128 Bitcoins within 3 Months

I will show you how to make 128 bitcoin with as little as 0.031 bitcoin within 3 months.

First you will have to open a bitcoin wallet for free on BLOCKCHAIN .

Secondly you will have to fund your wallet with 0.031 bitcoin which is the amount used to invest where by making 128 bitcoins.
For your information, your wallet is like your bank with you and it is secured because it is decrypted and encrypted whenever you login to your wallet.

Next you will to get a like to register on the platform ZARFUND that helps you make 128 bitcoin, then you have to bring two people to do same as you did.
                    

I will invite you to a whatsapp group where we help each other make bitcoins with this few steps.

Follow this link to join the group, seminar comes up everyday at (20:00 GMT +1)
       
                https://chat.whatsapp.com/9D4yHMqCf8o8MVkRSMvw6o

Saturday, 22 February 2014

I make my meals and wash my clothes - 91 years old Shoyele

He is an interesting old man. please read through his interview with a PUNCH reporter

Ninety-one-year-old Mr. Moses Shoyele talks about his experience in the Nigerian army in this interview with FEMI MAKINDE
 When were you born?
I was born on January 1, 1923. I attended Baptist Day School at Awe, Oyo State. After that, I taught for a year in Oyo town before proceeding to Iwo in Osun State. From Iwo, I left for Lagos in 1940.
 Who were your parents? 
My dad was a farmer and my mother was a petty trader and a housewife. My father was a polygamist.  My mother bore six children and I am her second son.
 How was your growing up like?
My growing up was tough. Before going to school, we had to do extra work to buy uniforms, books and other things. It was not easy at all in those days. Most times, we had to fend for ourselves because it was not easy catering for the needs of my elder brother, my half-brother including myself, attending school at that time. We wove baskets, set traps to catch animals and did menial jobs to raise money to buy some of the things we needed in school.
 What did you do after you left school?
I left for Lagos after schooling, I went there to stay with an uncle with the hope that he would help me further my education. Unfortunately, he couldn’t and was the one who suggested that I should enrol at a mechanic workshop to learn how to repair automobiles.
It was against my wish because I had always wanted to be a nurse.  I was a member of the First Aid group in secondary school. One day, I went to CMS Bookshop and met a European who was inquisitive and asked me what I wanted to buy. I told him I wanted to buy first aid books and he asked if I was a ‘first aider’ and I said yes.
He suggested that I should enlist in the army because they were looking for ‘first aiders’ for field ambulance. He said I would be selected if I applied and that morning, I went to the barracks at Obalende, Lagos.  I was selected and that was how I joined the West African Frontier Force in the 1940s.
 What was your experience in the army?
While we were in the unit, they organised a crash programme for us as first aiders cum nurses at General Hospital in Lagos.  After six months, they conducted an examination for us and those of us who were successful were absorbed into the army as nurses cum first aiders.  As the year 1941 was ending, we were moved to the Military Hospital at Abeokuta, Ogun State, where we continued our training and working on the field as well. That was how I became a nurse. As time went by, after series of examinations and courses, we were upgraded as nursing orderly Grades 1, 2 and 3.  We were posted to different departments after few weeks and moved to other departments to gain experience.  By 1942, the whole army unit was moved to Kaduna to set up a military hospital there.
While I was there, I had an opportunity to take some other courses. I was posted to X-ray department. There, I started some courses and eventually became an X-ray technician.
In 1943, I was already an X-ray technician 3. When it was time for the European personnel working in the hospital to leave, I was asked to take over the department. I was in charge of the X-ray department till 1946 before I was demobilised. Before that time, my colleagues had been discharged from the army. But unfortunately for me there was nobody to relieve me in the X-ray Department at that time and I was given another year. Initially, I felt so sad that my colleagues were going while I was still kept there but by September 1946, someone came. They gathered my papers and I was given clearance to go to Oshodi where I was handed my discharge certificate.
What happened after you were discharged from the army?
I went to stay with my brother in Lagos. He was working with a company in Lagos. Within the week that I stayed there something happened. I got a letter from the Military headquarters that I should go to Ibadan and report for work.  That was how I became the person in charge of the X-ray department there.  It was not a full-time job and the then Director of Medical Services decided that I should work in the ward as a nurse since I was qualified. He told me that I would return to work in the X-ray department if there was an emergency there.  So, I was working in the ward and at the same time in the X-ray department.
 How did you meet your wife?
I met her when I was still in the army. During the warm season, we were always given 30 days to relax. I went home during the 30-day-leave and a friend of mine, Mr. Oyewo invited me to his farm. He was a cattle rearer, so I went to see his cows and it was there I met one of his brother’s daughters, Grace Shoyele née Oyewo.  She was working on the farm, we chatted and I became interested in her.
 What attracted you to her?
 I was attracted by her smile and the way she talked. We started talking and that was how it started.
 How many children do you have?
I have six children comprising four males and two females. When we were growing up, we saw the value of education and thus decided that whatever it would cost us, we must educate our children. With my wife’s cooperation, we gave them the best of education.
 What are you children doing now?
One is a retired principal. He retired from Abadina Grammar School while another is a teacher at Command Secondary School, Lagos. One of them is also a teacher at Olivet High School, Oyo. I have a child in the UK who is a journalist, one is a lawyer and the last one is a quantity surveyor.
 How do you relax?
I ensure that I go to the garden every morning to do some physical exercises. I cannot do without exercise in the morning. I do this every morning after my morning prayer.
 What is your favourite meal?        
 I eat anything. I don’t have any favourite meal.  I know that whatever I eat will not harm me.
 Did you partake in the World War 11?
No, I was in the hospital doing my work. I was not on the field.
 Do you attend social functions?
No, I don’t do that now. But even then, I didn’t have opportunity to attend social functions because of the volume of work. In 1958, when the General Hospital, Iwo, was inaugurated, we worked day and night because the employees were few and we had many people to attend to. We went to work early and came back late. We only came home to freshen up and return to the hospital if there was an emergency. So, we had no time for social activities.
After the hospital was well established, we discovered that we had little time for ourselves. That was why we formed a club to interact. It is situated opposite Bowen University, Iwo, Osun State.
 Who are your friends?
I have no particular friend. Anybody that comes my way is my friend. My wife always complained that people visited me but I would not visit them in return. But I don’t believe that is how to make friends. I try to assist anybody who comes my way in any way I can.
 What is the secret of your good health?  
 It is God. I am alive and well by the grace of God. I think  one of the things I enjoy is that I don’t restrict myself to a particular meal.
 What advice do you have for youths?
 I want them to be careful with their lifestyle. Young people indulge in drinking alcohol and cigarette smoking.
 Where is your wife?
She is dead. She passed on over a year ago.
 How did you cope with your wife during the war?
I was not married then.  I married after I left the army.
 How are you coping without your wife?
 I have learnt to live on my own anywhere I find myself. I don’t depend on people to do things for me.  It is my habit. I do everything for myself now. I cook and wash.
 Are you considering remarrying?
Not at all. I am 91, what else am I still looking for? Why do I need to remarry? My wife just passed on over a year ago.
 Aren’t you afraid of death?
Death is one of the necessities of life. One must die. As long as one lives a fulfilled life, one should not be afraid of death. Death will come when it will come and one should be prepared for it.
 What advice do you have for nurses? 
The nursing profession is a noble one, hence one needs to put in everything into it in order to be able to help others. It appears that things have changed now. In those days, what was paramount on our mind was to ensure that our patients were given adequate attention. It is unlike now when nurses are looking for other things.  When I retired from the service, I started a clinic in Iwo and I was using everything I had for my patients. I don’t think anything is too much to sacrifice in order to help somebody in need.  I am always happy to help others and I think that is how every nurse should feel. Anybody who one helps will not forget one. Such a person will not cease to pray for one even if he or she has nothing to give. Prayer is far better than anything else.
 What was your most memorable experience during your nursing career?
There was a pastor who came to my clinic when it was newly opened.  His wife was pregnant and she was taken somewhere to deliver the baby. Unfortunately, they were turned back after the delivery. The baby was just about the size of a rat, so the pastor came to the clinic and said I should help him.
I had no oxygen tent in the clinic and asked him to take his wife and the baby to the hospital but he said they had been rejected there. I improvised a bed, bought a roll of cotton wool and used it as a cover for the tiny baby. I asked the mother to distill her breast milk and the baby was fed through the nostril. I fed the baby in the morning, afternoon and night. He was given glucose and breast milk. You cannot believe that the baby is big now. He is married and practising as a nurse as well. Anytime I remember the incident, it gives me joy.

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Fuel Scarcity!

The artificial fuel scarcity that has hit Nigeria has left several Nigerians breathless, and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has attributed the partial fuel scarcity in some states of the country to a disruption in the product’s distribution chain.

Dr Omar Ibrahim, Acting General Manager Public Affairs Division, NNPC has however assured Nigerians that normalcy would return in petroleum distribution by Thursday.

Reason for the Scarcity: Major Pipeline Vandalization

Dr Ibrahim said that two points of the corporation’s major pipelines were vandalized – one at Akute in Lagos, and another in Ogere, Ogun state, both in the South-west region of Nigeria.

He noted that the current situation was one of distribution, not shortage of supply, and explained that the corporation has been working since Tuesday to restore functionality to the two points.

“It was a problem of distribution and not shortage of supply, and it was due to the vandalization of the two main lines of Mosimi and Atlas Cove.

“Our team has started working since Tuesday (Feb. 18) and as at 2.30 pm today (Wednesday), we have started re-streaming Mosimi line and by 4.18 p.m., we were able to pump to Atlas Cove.

“With the two lines in operation, normalcy will return immediately because we are also monitoring the pipeline,” he stated.


However, This Day Live newspaper reports that Lagos’ fuel situation may have been worsened by an oil spill across the Lagos metropolis in the Ijegun area of the state. The spill is reported to have flooded over 300 houses in the area, which forced the PPMC to lock the fuel valve to forestall further spill. The valve lock has resulted in a fuel shortfall, which has translated to a scarcity wave in Lagos, which has led people to panic buying.

An anonymous government official, reporting to This Day, said: “When the community alerted NNPC of the spill. They were forced to shut down production in order to carry out repairs. They stopped pumping products.

“The products that are in the market were those already in the pipeline. Once the valves were shut off, repairs began in order to restore the pipeline back to order.

“When the marketers discovered what has happened, they started hoarding products because they are not sure when or where they would get products to buy.

“That hoarding of products is what is manifesting today as fuel scarcity. But that would soon end because once NNPC starts pumping again, we can assure you that products would be back to the market.”

The New Fuel Price

Even though the FG has regulated fuel price at N97 per litre, PM news reports that the price of fuel in many parts of Lagos and Ogun state has been hiked to N100 per litre. P.M. news reports, however, that NNPC and Total stations were still dispensing petrol at the normal price.

“Do not Panic-Buy Fuel, Nigerians” - PPMC

The Pipeline and Products Marketing Company (PPMC), an NNPC subsidiary has said that there is enough fuel in stock, and Nigerians do not need to hoard fuel or engage in panic buying.

Nasir Imodagbe, spokesperson for the PPMC, said “we have robust supply of fuel, same with NNPC to serve the country for days; I don’t know where the issue of scarcity is coming from. We are appealing to Nigerians not to engage in panic buying, because there are enough products to keep the country moving. We advise the marketers not to hoard fuel as anyone caught would be sanctioned,” he said.

And the Black Market comes to the rescue

Commercial bus drivers have found solace in the black market, which gives with one hand and collects with the other. Commercial bus drivers say they are now forced to buy fuel at exorbitant prices and the spillover effect is that passengers now have to pay higher prices to arrive their destination. The resultant fuel hike and long queues at petrol stations has resulted in higher frustration levels in the state.