재이.Sol Deluxe
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재이.Sol Deluxe
@TechSighFa
I love to gamble on Sol. I identify as Designer, a Defi enthusiast and sometimes, a Content Creator.
Earth Sumali Haziran 2024
581 Sinusundan596 Mga Tagasunod
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Architect vs Engineer, UX designer vs developer 😂
Gamer_Architect@QHVZYMY
An architect’s imagination is an engineers nightmare
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Don’t be surprised when you get to the airport wanting to board to London and they use coastal bus to move you from Ogun to Lagos.
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories
BREAKING: Air Peace to begin London flights from Ogun new Gateway airport this summer. ~ CEO Onyema says
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Cybertruck papa see your colleague oh
Apostle Chibuzor Gift Chinyere@daddyopm
Whenever I go to watch movie in genesis cinema with my children. We book the whole halls for only my children.
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“NO BROMATE!”
Have you ever stopped to wonder why those words are boldly written on most bread nylons in Nigeria?
Today, let’s talk about it.
Potassium bromate (KBrO₃) was once a common ingredient in bread-making. Bakers used it because it helped dough rise faster, made bread softer, and gave loaves that attractive, fluffy look.
But there was a serious problem, a dangerous one.
When bread isn’t baked at the right temperature or for long enough, bromate may not fully break down. That means traces of it remain in the bread we eat.
Over time, it can accumulate in the body. Scientific studies revealed that bromate is carcinogenic, it can cause cancer and also damage the kidneys.
For years, Nigerians unknowingly consumed bread containing this harmful substance. It was widespread because it was cheap and effective.
Then, everything changed. A woman decided it was time to put a stop to it.
Her name was Professor Dora Nkem Akunyili, who served as Director-General of NAFDAC from 2001 to 2008.
When she assumed office, Nigeria’s food and drug system was in chaos — fake products, unsafe additives, and weak regulation dominated the market. But Dora Akunyili was not one to ignore such dangers.
She launched investigations, sending officials to bakeries across the country to secretly collect bread samples. The findings were alarming.
A large portion of bread in circulation contained unsafe levels of bromate. That was all she needed to act.
In 2002, under her leadership, NAFDAC officially banned the use of potassium bromate in bread production across Nigeria.
But she didn’t stop at policy. She took the fight to the public — speaking on air, addressing the press, and openly naming offenders. She warned Nigerians that the very bread many families relied on daily could be harming their health.
The resistance was fierce. Many bakers pushed back. But she stood her ground.
NAFDAC carried out raids, shut down non-compliant bakeries, and educated the public. Gradually, things began to change.
Bakers adopted safer alternatives like ascorbic acid (vitamin C), and the label “NO BROMATE” became a symbol of safety and accountability. Today, many people don’t realize the impact of that decision.
Dora Akunyili was more than a regulator, she was a defender of public health. Her courage and integrity forced an entire industry to choose human life over profit.
So, the next time you pick up a loaf of bread and see “NO BROMATE” on the nylon, take a moment to remember the woman behind it.
Her name is Dora Akunyili.
She didn’t just enforce a policy.
She saved a generation.


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The Nigerian Medical Association has now confirmed that Blessing CEO deceived and defrauded Nigerians by parading a fake and forged medical report of breast cancer which originally belongs to someone else called Mbara Deborah. The NMA says Blessing CEO fraudulently forged this document to deceive the public for money.
The NMA is now calling on the government and all relevant authorities to please step in and “do the needful to save unsuspecting members of the public from being taken advantage of.”
It is a shame that it has gotten to this.
But I completely agree with the NMA that this fraudulent disgraceful attempt to mock the pain of real cancer patients, to minimise the distress of people who have lost loved ones to cancer and to exploit the kindness of Nigerians is an insane behaviour that we must not tolerate as a society.
This fraudulent deception needs to stop.


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@PrettyMfon If it’s not lasting as it should, it’s a battery issue. If it’s not charging as it should, it’s a panel issue. She should get someone to fix it.
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😂😂😂. I no understand this your Solar. Used Solar in Nigeria and it lasted for a long time. Had big batteries and stabilizer. You need to get someone who is really good with it. The guy who installed mine was very good and did an excellent job.
YabaLeftOnline@yabaleftonline
“I’m tired of this solar wahala. My inverter only lasts about four hours a day, and right now I’m back to using a generator. Every day, I spend ₦38,000 on fuel.” — Lady cr!es out after spending millions to install solar
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