City RW options:
One guy who does everything but score.
One guy who does nothing but score.
City ST options:
One guy who is always offside.
One guy who is never offside.
City RB options:
One guy.
We were told on the parade ground by the State Coordinator that they could not bear to see people suffering outside because they were like sons and daughters to them. If that was truly the case, proper accommodation and planning should have been arranged from the beginning
which was manageable. We settled in, started bonding, and despite everything, it became enjoyable. I stayed there from Wednesday through Saturday while still trying to complete registration, which itself took about three days
So much for the “Center of Excellence.”
The overcrowding led to people sleeping outside in terrible conditions.
I arrived on the first day and spent almost eight hours in line trying to register and secure a bed space. Eventually I got one. My room had about 30 people
That alone shows that corruption does not only exist at the top. It lives in everyday systems too.
I understand giving priority to nursing mothers, married women, and medical personnel. That makes sense.
another conversation entirely.
Because of that, the camp became overcrowded. A place that should probably hold around 2,500 corps members had over 8,000 people. You cannot blame those 8,000 people. Some were lucky enough to get Lagos normally, while many others paid for direct
Simple registration should never become suffering.
I will also admit my own part in the problem. I paid to be posted specifically to Lagos because I wanted safety and did not want to travel long distances in an unsafe country. Many others likely did the same.
Anyone outside those categories should go through the same process as everyone else.
What shocked me most was when a soldier looked at me and said, “This life has slots, and it is normal in a country like this.” That statement says everything wrong with the mindset of this natio
Anyone outside those categories should go through the same process as everyone else.
What shocked me most was when a soldier looked at me and said, “This life has slots, and it is normal in a country like this.”
Yet a lot of what people see online does not reflect the reality
The registration process was unnecessarily stressful and poorly handled. People stood in queues for hours, even days, while certain individuals were allowed to walk straight in and get attended to immediately.