Val Iyare

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Val Iyare

Val Iyare

@ValIyare

CEO, Tega Assets Real Estate | Healthcare Assistant | MBA Holder | Customer Service Specialist | Passionate dreamer & firm believer in purpose and possibilities

London, England Katılım Haziran 2022
663 Takip Edilen113 Takipçiler
Val Iyare retweetledi
SK the Plug 🔌 🇬🇧🇬🇧
How to pass the Life in the UK test first time, one sitting 🇬🇧 You’ve survived visa stress, Home Office wahala, years of building your life here. Don’t let a 45 minute test slow you down. Here’s everything you need to know 👇🏾
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B.O
B.O@babatunde_o_a·
I spent months doing this manually. Open the Home Office sponsor register. Cross-reference job boards. Hunt each company's careers page. Check whether the salary meets the CoS threshold. Track it all in a spreadsheet. Repeat every week. The data exists. The problem is nobody has turned it into a proper job search tool. So I built one. VisaPath UK combines everything a skilled worker actually needs in one place: 🔍 Search 125,572 verified UK sponsor companies by name, city and sector 💷 Salary threshold checker — know instantly if an offer meets the CoS requirement 📋 Personal application tracker — no more spreadsheets ✉️ Weekly job alerts for new roles at sponsor companies (coming soon) 🤖 AI CV tailoring per role (coming soon) The register search already exists in other forms. What doesn't exist is a platform built around the full job search experience, from finding sponsors to applying with confidence. That's what I'm building. I'm Babatunde Oloko — MSc Business Analytics, Glasgow. I built this because I lived the problem. Hundreds of thousands of skilled workers in the UK are living it right now. Launching publicly next week. Drop a comment or DM me if you want early access. If this comes across your TL. Kindly repost for wider reach. Thank you #SkilledWorkerVisa #UKImmigration #VisaSponsorship #JobSearch #VisaPathUK #BuiltThis
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Val Iyare retweetledi
Dele Olawanle
Dele Olawanle@dolawanle·
BEFORE YOU RELOCATE TO THE UK. If you have a good job or a thriving business in Nigeria and you are well established, think twice before leaving everything to relocate to the UK. Many men sponsored their wives and children to the UK and financially supported them. The wife or the children puts pressure on them to join them in the UK. They start having issues, and the wife sets the man up, turns the children against him, and calls the police or the social services on him. He is kicked out of the house, not allowed to see the children, and cannot return to Nigeria, having lost everything. I have dealt with hundreds of cases like this. My advice is that you should think twice before relocating your family to the UK, and if you must do that, think twice before joining them in the UK, and think thrice before selling everything you have in Nigeria to do that. You must have a Plan B and a shock absorber. You must be sure your wife has not changed. She o ti gbo (I hope you heard me). My name is Dele Olawanle. I am a coach. I think, write, and speak to improve lives. Share this post. Follow me for more insights and inspiration. #deleolawanlesnuggets
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Val Iyare retweetledi
DEK360Ghana🇬🇭
DEK360Ghana🇬🇭@Dek360Ghana·
A man recounts the hardships of relocating his wife to the UK, describing it as a highly challenging experience. He urges other men to understand their partner’s character thoroughly before taking such steps and admits that ignoring his parents’ advice has contributed to the problems he now faces.
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Val Iyare retweetledi
folowosele adeboye
folowosele adeboye@boye4christ2006·
The day a Nigerian father in the UK called the police on his own daughter, people thought he had lost his mind but he hadn’t. He had simply understood the gamebefore it destroyed his home.😎 She is 14. Back in Nigeria? Calm. Respectful. No issues. Even when they first relocated to the UK, she was still that same good girl. Then suddenly something shifted. “Shut up,” she told her mother one day, when her mum corrected her. The mother froze. Maybe it was a bad mood. But it didn’t stop there. If her father spoke, she would stand chest to chest with him, eyes locked, almost daring him. Like she was waiting. Waiting for something. At first, they thought it was teenage phase. But this one didn’t feel normal. It felt calculated. One day, the father asked her to do something simple. She refused. She stood right in front of him and said, boldly, “I’m not doing it.” And then she waited. That moment… that silence… that eye contact… She was hoping he would react. You know that Nigerian reflex. That “I will show you I’m your father” reaction. But her dad did something nobody expected. He picked up his phone and called the police. The mother panicked. “Are you serious?!” He said calmly, “If I touch her, they will carry me. Let them carry her instead.” When the police arrived, he didn’t shout. He didn’t explain too much. He just said, “Please take her.” In the UK, once a child starts acting out like that, they often süsp3ct m£nt@l health issues. So the officers said they would take her for evaluation. The moment she heard “mental health” Her confidence disappeared. Immediately. She started begging. Crying.“Please, mummy… please, daddy…” But het father didn’t move. “Take her,” he repeated. And they did. That night, the house was quiet but heavy. The next day, social services showed up. They said, “She’s been crying non-stop. She wants to talk.” The father said, “Not yet.” On the second day, they said “She hasn’t eaten. She keeps begging.” Finally, he agreed to see her. The moment she stepped back into that house, She didn’t argue. She didn’t stand tall. She went straight to the floor. Kneeing. Crying. Begging. That was when the truth came out. Her friends in school had told her. Provoke your parents, they told her. Make them hit you. Report them. The government will take you away, give you a house, money, freedom, iphone with free WiFi. In her mind, she was about to upgrade her life. 😀 New phone. Freedom. Soft life. But she didn’t know one thing Not every parent will play the role you scripted for them especially Nigerians. Her father didn’t react. He redirected. And the script, flipped on her. -Uncle recounts his UK brother’s experience with his daughter. Posted as seen!
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Val Iyare
Val Iyare@ValIyare·
Yes I had a nice time at Albania
Val Iyare tweet mediaVal Iyare tweet mediaVal Iyare tweet media
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Oyindamola🙄
Oyindamola🙄@dammiedammie35·
If this p happen to you, wetin you go do?😭💔
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Dfw Me
Dfw Me@DfwMe_01·
Do you want it?😌🍒
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Plato's Cousin
Plato's Cousin@TadyJerry·
Until death, a man is in his prime. Dream money can buy. This old man can have as many of this baddie as he wants. Game is game.
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Sir Mapy
Sir Mapy@sirmapy·
Decided to stop at chicken republic. First meal of the day.
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BIG OLA (Arc Loading)
BIG OLA (Arc Loading)@Big_Ola01·
I’ve got like 5 friends with outlier acc but their UK job can’t give them chance to do the jobs But to see competent guys to work on their acc, Omo 50%, 40% (you), 10% (me) Let me know if we can trust you.
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Prophet Joel Ogebe
Prophet Joel Ogebe@ProphetJoelO·
Welcome to April our month of OPEN HEAVENS. A cloud the size of a man’s finger is rising and so there shall be abundance of rain. The limitations are lifted and the land shall be healed. Even the wicked will be drenched with water and the righteous shall be blessed with the good showers of heaven. Your little seed shall multiply and when they say there’s a casting down, you shall enjoy and a lifting up. So shall it be. - Prophet Joel Ogebe
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