Uchechuku
31.2K posts

Uchechuku
@_DrScope
Friend of God/Work hard play hard
Earth Entrou em Ağustos 2011
2.1K Seguindo2K Seguidores

Una say this song no be Cultist song?🤔
Alexus🐐@Alexusdeyforyou
Which kind music be this?Onwerozi ife M'na ahota🤷
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@unclemandela121 @Hollu_Midey Lol it’s important to me because I use it in:
Quantifying unknown samples (protein etc)
DNA/RNA quantification
Enzyme kinetics
Immunoassays
Saturation effects
Validation of my lab equipment
But I use the digital versions but it’s still same thing 😁😁
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@abasimaenyinn The economic realities have also changed, afrobeats is now global necessitating a global approach to its distribution and influence. It is a cycle..
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End-stage 'Afrobeats to the world':
One of the greatest delusions of Nigerians refusing to fix the local music industry was "they don't have our sauce. Everyone will come to us."
Even after seeing the stripping and reintegration of Caribbean genres into the global music splicing machine.
Afrobeats is there already. Every pop culture space has stripped, redefined and melded Afrobeats into their local offering, making it far removed from the West African originators.
This dude doesn't need to come to Lagos for no 'sauce.' He already unlocked his own new and familiar thing.
This is end-stage Afrobeats to the world.
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@sanjsokutepa Thank God it has come to a conclusive end. The ultimate end will be palpable alerts in their bank accounts. May God bless you for your efforts..
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Today the 24th day of March 2026, the Supreme Court of Nigeria finally ended the most agonizing journey of 96 Nigerians teachers who were unjustly redeployed to their states of origin by the government of Benue State in 2006. These Nigerians who were experienced teachers were employed by the Benue State Universal Basic Education Board and or various local governments of Benue state.
They were teaching in various local government schools in Benue State until sometimes in 2006 when the government of Benue State unconstitutionally decided to redeployed them to their states of origin. These teachers were 96 in number. They came from various parts of Nigeria. By operation of law there are not indigenes of Benue State but had lived all their lives in the service of Benue State.
These teachers briefed me in 2006 to challenge their unlawful and unconstitutional deployments to their states of origin on the grounds amongst other things that the Benue state government lacked the powers to deploy them to their various states in Nigeria outside the territorial jurisdiction of Benue State and that it was discriminatory to send them away from Benue state to their States of origin simply because they are not indigenes of Benue State.
These teachers put in many years of useful services to the educational growth of Benue state and due to no fault of theirs the government decided to treat them unfairly. In 2006 I filled the case for them. We sought orders to set aside the redeployment and and declaration that they were still in in the employment of the state government and orders that their salaries and allowances be paid to them until they leave office or until properly removed from their employment by due process of law.
The case was assigned to Hon Justice Joseph Tine Tur J as he then was later JCA but now of blessed memory. His lordship delivered judgement on 18th February 2008 in favour of the 96 teachers. He ordered their reinstatement and the payments of their salaries and allowances from 2006 until they retired or removed from office in accordance with due process of law. Their redeployment to their states of origin on the basis that there were not indigenes of Benue state was held to be unconstitutional and discriminatory and therefore null and void.
The Benue state government appealed the decision and the appeal was dismissed.There was no further appeal. Yet the government did not obey the orders. The salaries and allowances were not paid as ordered. Several efforts to make the government obey the orders proved unsuccessful. In 2018 or so we calculated the salaries and allowances of the teachers. We sent it to the government to pay. It ignored it. We enforced the judgment for the payment of their salaries and allowances vide garnishes orders. After hotly contested the garnishee was made absolute in 2021 or thereabouts.
Despite the garnishee orders absolute neither the garnishee nor the Benue State government respected the court orders. We waited and waited to no avail. Judgments of court orders must be obeyed. So in 2024 we executed the garnishee orders absolute against the account of the garnishees. That was the beginning of another litigation. The Benue State government filed a suit for the interpretation of the garnishees orders absolute and the judgment of the court in 2008.
We filed objections to the jurisdiction of court to interpret judgment. Our objection was sustained and the case dismissed. Appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed. The further appeal to the Supreme Court was dismissed. At today’s proceedings the Supreme Court gave decent burial to the case. To obtain immediate justice in Nigeria is difficult.
But for the fact the Supreme Court was firm today the appeal would have been adjourned. The Supreme Court ended the excruciating journey of nightmare of 96 Nigerians today. These 96 Nigerians last received salaries and allowances in 2005. God bless the justices of the Supreme Court always.
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@General_Somto @MizCazorla1 Says someone who hasn’t been a counselor before..he should go and sit down and think about his life..
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@DuruFranxic My question, what is the process for bulk purchase say for his clinic?
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Well, provided the current reality in Nigeria has not redefined the people in that class. So if it has not, then middle class is the right bracket. But even that bracket is not leaving for just a degree. They are leaving because of security, economy, governance, and opportunity. A campus at Alaro City cannot fix any of that. I have friends who came to the UK between 2007 to 2015. Some came back for another masters, others a PhD, others came back on Skilled Worker visa. The pathway is the product. The degree is just what gets you through the door. I posted a research by UK's UCAS that supports this stance. A Lagos campus sells the name without opening those doors. Those who have sorted their own security, and providing what the government won't, and can afford it, can enjoy their Coventry campus in Nigeria.
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1/
The NUC lifted its ban on foreign universities in Nigeria in December 2025.
Three months later, the Federal Government announced a Coventry University campus.
No institution has yet cleared the new framework.
Nigeria has also done this before. In 1948. It was called the University of Ibadan. London awarded the degrees until 1967. The NUC was built specifically to make sure it never happened again.
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@Jomilojju @jomikky You are on point. It doesn’t solve the japa problem as the goal of japa is permanent residence abroad and visiting home occasionally. This is more so for the “middle class”.
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Another expensive option is exactly what it is. The problem is it was not sold as that. It was sold as solving japa and expanding access for families who cannot afford to send their children abroad. A free market product serving the premium bracket is fine. Calling it an access initiative is the issue.
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Biko, in this election season, I appeal to all Igbo political gladiators: campaign freely, support whomever you wish, but leave Ndigbo as a collective out of your statements.
Do not question our collective choices. From 1960 to date, Ndigbo have consistently voted in line with what we believe to be our interest.
The Igbo people have never operated as a monolithic political bloc directed by any single voice or authority.
We have no central parliament that determines a unified electoral position.
Our strength has always resided in the independence of thought and the agency of our people.
Our voting patterns reflect our understanding of our interests, shaped by history and lived experience.
That history is not a light one.
It carries the weight of displacement and adaptation; the scars of the transatlantic slave trade; the disruptions of colonial rule; the trauma of pogroms; the devastation of civil war; and the persistence required to navigate structural constraints in its aftermath.
Yet, we endured. We overcame. And more importantly, we rebuilt.
It is therefore important that, even in moments of political contestation, we approach our collective identity with respect and responsibility.
What may be described today as political setbacks must be situated within the broader historical arc of a people defined by resilience, enterprise, and renewal.
Let us not, in the urgency of present contests, diminish that enduring story.
I appeal to all: engage robustly in politics, but allow Ndigbo the dignity of agency.
Respect our long arc of survival.
Respect our right to choose.
Respect the wisdom of our people.
Uche bụ akpa onye ọbụna; onye ọ bụla na-ebu nke ya.
As a people, we are guided by Uche, Uchu, and Egwu Chukwu.
Osita Chidoka
21 March 2026

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