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Nestlé Nigeria Graduate Internship Program 2026 is OPEN
Nestlé Nigeria is inviting applications for its Graduate Internship Program (Nesternship), offering hands-on experience in a global FMCG company.
Benefits
– Hands-on experience in a global company
– Work on real business projects
– Exposure to multiple departments
– Networking & career growth opportunities
Tracks
– Corporate Communication, IT, Technical
– Marketing & Sales, HR, Finance, Supply Chain
Eligibility
– B. Sc/HND in relevant field
– Strong communication & teamwork skills
– Willingness to learn and grow
Apply: jobs.revicemycv.com/job/nestl-nige…
Deadline: Not specified (Apply early)
Full details: jobs.revicemycv.com/job/nestl-nige…
Optimize your CV via revicemycv.com or tailor it here: revicemycv.com/cv-tailor
Know someone who qualifies? Tag or share, it could help them secure an opportunity.

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@saint_oreoluwa Sorry, but you are a big fool. A very stupid one at that. See the way you are simping like a sperm that lost its wat into the ovary.
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@Adeolaid2 @Obumnemetg @YemiFirstson Poverty is your middle name.
It's not surprising you don't know anything about entrepreneurship or enterprising.
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@Preshighsoft @Obumnemetg @YemiFirstson He's from Onitsha the drug capital of d whole world. It'll be good to tell us how Peter Obi made his money. As an undergraduate, he said that he bought 2 brand new cars, built a house that he leased to a bank. These & more things he did couldn't have come from his campus shop.
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As a governor of Anambra, every senior prefect in the state had a direct contact with Governor Peter Obi. Why? He wanted them to report what was wrong in their schools directly to him, if you call him, he would personally come and check it out. The man’s humility and simplicity is not performative. It’s really somehow that over a decade later he comes out to contest elections in the country and you’re seeing videos of him carrying his bags like he has always done and you’re calling it “performative and theatrics”. He’s not even doing it for you to applaud him. Baba is just being him.
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@Preshighsoft @Obumnemetg @YemiFirstson Yorubas are not dumb like your people that celebrate mediocre & criminality. You want govt to beg for your people on death row in the diaspora, at home Mmesoma is a celebrity for forgery. Your region is celebrating JB logo, roundabout, water fountain, brewery etc.
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@Adeolaid2 @Obumnemetg @YemiFirstson Yoruba people will forever remian dumb. They can't analyze at all. Simple exponential equation you can't solve.
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@Obumnemetg @YemiFirstson How many secondary schools were in Anambra then? What's the entire population of the state? It was about 4m (about the size of an LG in Lagos). If all secondary schs in Nigeria start calling the president, how will he attend to other pressing issues?
You're celebrating ignorance
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@Obumnemetg Senior prefects had his phone number but he didn't have local government chairman for seven and a half of his eight years in office. Does that sound like a competent person to you? Someone who lacks the ability to delegate??
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@Preshighsoft @PeterObi You dey drink igbo
What can you do, even if you get machine gun, what power do you get. Who will follow you
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From Pharisee to Tax Collector: Rethinking Tinubu’s Kenyan Comparison
In a recent remark in Yenagoa, Bola Ahmed Tinubu suggested that Nigerians should find solace in being “better off than Kenya and other African countries.” While this may have been intended to soften the impact of economic hardship and rising fuel prices, the comment risks downplaying the severity of the current crisis. It echoes the biblical parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in the Gospel of Luke (18:9–14). A similar warning is found in the Qur’an (53:32), which cautions against self-righteousness.
Like the Pharisee who boasted of his superiority over others to mask his own spiritual void, such downward comparisons serve more as a refuge than a remedy. This validated an earlier dismissive remark by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu during electioneering: “Na statistics we go shop?” Yet statistics remain indispensable - they are the language through which nations understand their condition and chart progress. No country can develop in isolation from measurable realities or without comparing itself with peers. Comparisons, when properly grounded, are not instruments of escapism but tools of accountability. What is objectionable is not comparison itself, but comparison stripped of credible, verifiable data—mere tax collector comparisons that soothe rather than solve.
On key development indicators such as security, the Human Development Index, life expectancy, GDP per capita, literacy levels, and electricity access, Kenya consistently outperforms Nigeria. Nigeria is the fourth most terrorised nation in the world, while Kenya is not among the ten worst. Kenya’s HDI ranking is 143 out of 180 countries, with a coefficient of about 0.630, compared to Nigeria’s ranking of 164 out of 180, with a coefficient of about 0.530. Its GDP per capita is roughly $2,200–$2,300, compared to Nigeria’s $807–$835. Kenya’s poverty rate is about 43% of the population (approximately 23 million people), while Nigeria’s is about 63% (around 150 million people), over six times that of Kenya. Kenya’s life expectancy is about 67 years, while Nigeria’s is about 54 years. The literacy rate in Kenya is approximately 81–85%, compared to Nigeria’s 62–65%.
Kenya’s electricity access is higher, while Nigeria has one of the lowest levels of electricity access in the world. Kenya has about 3.5 million out-of-school children, while Nigeria has about 20 million. Kenya’s inflation rate has been about 4.5% or lower over the past three years, while Nigeria’s has remained above 15% within the same period. Kenya’s exchange rate has been around USD 1 to KES 130 over the past three years, whereas Nigeria’s exchange rate rose from below ₦500/$1 to above ₦1,250/$1 within the same period. Even with developments in the Middle East and rising oil prices, Kenyans have not experienced the sharp increases in petroleum product prices seen in Nigeria.
Across other key indicators, Kenya also performs better. In the end, these indices clearly show that Kenya ranks higher than Nigeria on several development metrics. The standard of living of Kenyans is better than that of Nigerians. If the President considers Kenyans to be suffering despite these stronger figures, then Nigerians are in a far more difficult situation. He should therefore refrain from self-consolation and, in honest reflection, take responsibility for the situation and make a determined effort to drive improvement. This requires a posture of humility, accountability, and commitment to addressing the factors that have slowed Nigeria’s development.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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@AirtelNigeria just start selling cement or pure water. This telecommunications thing, no be for Una... At all
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