What Happens If Biafra Gains Its Independence From Nigeria?

Nemesis

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:mjlol: But Goodluck is better than Buhari. Lmfao


he was fukking useless ......Boko Haram flourished under him ..... he didnt do fukk about the Chibok girls...... and after being left a surplus in the budget from Obasonjo he ran the coffers dry ..... every other day they are finding millions of dollars him and his cronies hid in houses.....

hes recognised universally as the worst elected president we have had ...
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
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he was fukking useless ......Boko Haram flourished under him ..... he didnt do fukk about the Chibok girls...... and after being left a surplus in the budget from Obasonjo he ran the coffers dry ..... every other day they are finding millions of dollars him and his cronies hid in houses.....

hes recognised universally as the worst elected president we have had ...

re: Boko Haram Flourished Under him
:ufdup:
Nigeria’s Valentines Offensive: Op Zaman Lafiya/ Logone 2015 Sitrep

re: Chibok Girls
:sas1:


re: Coffers
:snoop:
Nigeria: N19 Trillion Debt - We Can No Longer Borrow - Govt
:sas2:
“Nigeria will continue to borrow,” Adeosun says, two days after warning against debt - Premium Times Nigeria


You supporting this confused APC gov't is hilarious. I enjoy your family's suffering.
:youngsabo:
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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International observers mock Nigeria's ghost-worker President who hasn't been in the country for 100 DAYS
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The term “dead cat bounce” derives from the fact that even a dead cat will bounce if it falls from a great height. If you imagine a dead cat soaked in crude oil and dropped from a 50-storey building, you get a rough picture of how Nigeria’s economy is performing these days. Nigeria is expected to grow 2.5 per cent this year after contracting 1.6 per cent in 2016. But the population is also growing at 2.5 per cent. So in per capita terms, things are going nowhere. The reasons for the “recovery” are twofold. First, last year’s performance was so dismal it would have been difficult for the economy to fall further.

Without doing anything at all — a reasonable description of policy under Muhammadu Buhari, the country’s ailing leader and frequent London resident — the baseline effect has worked its magic. Second, the oil that makes up so much of government revenues is flowing faster. In June, production was 1.7m barrels a day, 10 per cent higher than a year ago. Like weeds shorn of their leaves, graft will doubtless spring back as lush as ever once the Buhari strimmer is back in its box One should, they say, never let a crisis go to waste. That advice has clearly not reached Abuja, where the economic collapse brought on by swooning oil prices was supposed to spur diversification. It has not happened. The danger now is that, having apparently come through the worst, Nigeria will simply go back to business as usual. If oil prices recover, so will headline growth. But the structure and basic dynamics of Africa’s largest economy will remain unchanged. Nigeria frustrates because of its vast potential. It has 190m people, among the sharpest, most driven and entrepreneurial on the continent. But perverse incentives have diverted the energy of the best and the brightest to mostly unproductive activities: making money through political connections, speculation, round-tripping and arbitrage.

When President Buhari was elected three years ago, he promised to end all this. The economy would be transformed. Manufacturing would be re-energised. So would agriculture, which employs three-quarters of the population but contributes only a fifth of output. The government would wean itself off oil revenue. Mr Buhari — stern, principled, incorruptible — was said to be the man to see this through. Little has come to pass. Mr Buhari took six months to name a cabinet and became embroiled in a necessary but distracting fight with Boko Haram. He has spent much of the past year convalescing from a mystery illness that has sapped his presidency of vigour and set off a merry-go-round of political jockeying to succeed him. There has been practically nothing in the way of coherent economic policy. True, there have been attempts to punish individuals for corruption. Yet, like weeds shorn of their leaves, graft will doubtless spring back as lush as ever once the Buhari strimmer is back in its box. An example of failure to cut corruption at the roots is the foreign exchange policy. Mr Buhari was determined to defend the phoney official rate. But the only way to do so was to ration dollars. Given the yawning gap with the black market, this has delivered a delicious arbitrage opportunity to anyone lucky — or connected — enough to get their hands on precious foreign exchange at the official window.

Sadly for hopes of economic diversification, the lucky beneficiaries of dollars did not include manufacturers. Most were actually banned from receiving the foreign exchange they needed to buy inputs or capital equipment. Far from expanding, manufacturing actually shrank last year. The economy is back to square one, gasping for a recovery in oil prices to breathe life back into the system. There are some promising signs. Agriculture is getting more attention, and there are tentative improvements in rice and other crops. If all goes to plan, by 2019, the country will have a $12bn oil refinery courtesy of Aliko Dangote, Nigeria’s richest man. This is an installation that could save billions in unnecessary imports of refined products. Related article ‘Big oil’ dismisses predictions of collapse in demand Saudi Aramco and Shell play down impact of electric vehicles Nigeria’s constitution is working. In Mr Buhari’s extended absence with illness, the competent and dynamic Yemi Osinbajo has been running the show. Foreign exchange policy has improved. In April, a “growth and recovery plan” was published, laying out plans to cut red tape, improve the tax take, reform state-owned enterprises and move towards a market-determined exchange rate. Such policy prescriptions have been discussed for 20 years.

The danger is Nigeria will still be talking about them 20 years hence. The immediate prospect is for a vicious and enervating power struggle to succeed Mr Buhari, whom few expect to contest the 2019 election. Whoever emerges victorious will doubtless promise to stamp out corruption, diversify the economy and rationalise the oil sector. Cats not only bounce. They also have nine lives.
 

Nemesis

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:mjlol:@Nemesis suffers from Afonja syndrome

You can't make this up!
:deadrose:



lol ..... a jew calling me an Afonja .... you couldnt make it up


please tell me what was Jonathan doing when those 300 girls went missing?

why did all the oil companies headquarters relocate from his state Delta to lagos because of the insecurity?

why did he allow Boko Haram to seize an area the size of Belgium under his watch

why did he pardon Alamieyeseigha when he was found guilty of corruption

what happened to the $2.5 billion dollar oil surplus that went missing under his watch

why does his wifes driver and houseboy have 15 million dollars in accounts in their names
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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lol ..... a jew calling me an Afonja .... you couldnt make it up


please tell me what was Jonathan doing when those 300 girls went missing?

why did all the oil companies headquarters relocate from his state Delta to lagos because of the insecurity?

why did he allow Boko Haram to seize an area the size of Belgium under his watch

why did he pardon Alamieyeseigha when he was found guilty of corruption

what happened to the $2.5 billion dollar oil surplus that went missing under his watch

why does his wifes driver and houseboy have 15 million dollars in accounts in their names

- What's Buhari doing when Boko Haram kidnapped dozens of Nigerian policewoman? Or when he blocked international volunteers from assisting the dying and starving in Borno?
- Jonathan shrunk Boko Haram's territory in Feb-March of 2015 and allowed elections to take place there. You can't deny facts. Buhari only inherited Jonathan's initial victories
:umad:
- Why did Buhari allow Rotimi Amaechi to steal funds from Rivers State to fund his campaign? Why does he allow that drug dealer Tinubu to be his Yoruba "king-maker"?
:dead:
- What happned to the billions which were stolen when Buhari was Sani Abacha's Petroleum Fund Minister?
:damn:
 

badtguy

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:pachaha:The posters in this thread are not serious about anything. Both ethnic groups

Biafra- my igbo brother including benue a north central sstate, can't take it seriously-
Nigeria- my yoruba breh said a dead president is better than Goodluck.
Slave trading- someone said oyo didn't sell slaves false- they were even selling the egbas.
Someone said arochukwu are ostracized because they sold slaves lmfao.

The arochukwu confederacy was was probably one of the most influential kingdoms in igboland. Mbadiwe twins were even in the rich nigerian in londonderry video.

Eko atlantic- someone said a yoruba project- lmfao tinubu that is close with many igbo Niger delta elites who purchase plots in lagos. if you're familiar with the ibrus, donald duke, Ben akabueze, you know that tinubu is very close with them and they more important than many yoruba . Lmao,

You guys need to stop trying gain brownie points on the coli. shyts ridiculous

Lmfao these yoruba vs igbo jokes are hilarious
 

BigMan

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We need to focus on the next possible "Giant of Africa". y'all Naijabrehs lauce.

What are realistic options?:jbhmm:

What if Diasporans move to S. Africa :jbhmm:
Let the Afrikaners leave :jbhmm:
Develop nukes:jbhmm:
Bare land available :jbhmm:
Invite Lesotho and Swaziland to join:jbhmm:
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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We need to focus on the next possible "Giant of Africa". y'all Naijabrehs lauce.

What are realistic options?:jbhmm:

What if Diasporans move to S. Africa :jbhmm:
Let the Afrikaners leave :jbhmm:
Develop nukes:jbhmm:
Bare land available :jbhmm:
Invite Lesotho and Swaziland to join:jbhmm:

Tanzania :yeshrug:
@Diasporan Royalty
 

Nemesis

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- What's Buhari doing when Boko Haram kidnapped dozens of Nigerian policewoman? Or when he blocked international volunteers from assisting the dying and starving in Borno?
- Jonathan shrunk Boko Haram's territory in Feb-March of 2015 and allowed elections to take place there. You can't deny facts. Buhari only inherited Jonathan's initial victories
:umad:
- Why did Buhari allow Rotimi Amaechi to steal funds from Rivers State to fund his campaign? Why does he allow that drug dealer Tinubu to be his Yoruba "king-maker"?
:dead:
- What happned to the billions which were stolen when Buhari was Sani Abacha's Petroleum Fund Minister?
:damn:


I noticed you never answered any of my questions ...lol


what victories did Johnathon have ..... the same man that denied that 300 girls were taken?


and talking of campaign funds.... the $50 million dollars that was found in an apartment in Ikoyi that was part of Johnathons re-elction fund, where did it come from? why was it left in an apartment .....


Like i said before unlike you Im not on the sidelines making noise ..... I live in lagos, yorubas are quite happy for you to go and live in Biafra ..... but for some reason the Igbos keep leaving there and coming to live in lagos ....lol

Obviously they want Biafra as long as they dont have to live there

all jokes aside unlike you Im not bitter or angry or some demented tribalist... i have Igbo friends, I employ some Igbo people and Ive fukked more Igbo girls than I can count so I dont really want to insult your people but people like you dont get it..... you cant live amongst people in their territories and disrespect them without getting some kickback which is why the Northern youths told all igbos to leave and go home
 

Apollo Creed

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We need to focus on the next possible "Giant of Africa". y'all Naijabrehs lauce.

What are realistic options?:jbhmm:

What if Diasporans move to S. Africa :jbhmm:
Let the Afrikaners leave :jbhmm:
Develop nukes:jbhmm:
Bare land available :jbhmm:
Invite Lesotho and Swaziland to join:jbhmm:

Diasporians are not gonna move to africa in large numbers. So focus on what YOU plan on doing and what country will give you the best opportunity to do so. This isnt a knock we just need to be realistic.
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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I noticed you never answered any of my questions ...lol


what victories did Johnathon have ..... the same man that denied that 300 girls were taken?


and talking of campaign funds.... the $50 million dollars that was found in an apartment in Ikoyi that was part of Johnathons re-elction fund, where did it come from? why was it left in an apartment .....


Like i said before unlike you Im not on the sidelines making noise ..... I live in lagos, yorubas are quite happy for you to go and live in Biafra ..... but for some reason the Igbos keep leaving there and coming to live in lagos ....lol

Obviously they want Biafra as long as they dont have to live there

all jokes aside unlike you Im not bitter or angry or some demented tribalist... i have Igbo friends, I employ some Igbo people and Ive fukked more Igbo girls than I can count so I dont really want to insult your people but people like you dont get it..... you cant live amongst people in their territories and disrespect them without getting some kickback which is why the Northern youths told all igbos to leave and go home

re: Jonathan's Victories - Your inability to read is telling. Boko Haram's caliphate, Gwoza, was taken before the elections along with hundreds of sq miles of territory
:youngsabo:
re: Campaign dollars
You're deflecting from Buhari's campaign being funded from stolen funds from the peoples of the Niger Delta by Amaechi/that drug dealer Tinubu
:lolbron:

I'm not bitter at all. I just think that you're stances are hilarious and easily mockable. Your willingness to defend a dead former dictator in London and claim that he's better than Jonathan deserves to be made fun of. I both smile and pity APC voters in the South-West. Their present hardship is of their own doing. May they suffer long and hard!
:ehh:
 
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