Tuesday, September 20

Riot Burst Out As Police attacks and destroy Okada Rider's park, and arrests them..

Few hours ago,  at IDO Ekiti, police acted like thugs, bounced punched, released teargas, in the garage at IDO Ekiti, which injured a lot of people as they ran at each other...







 it was very funny that people who should be protecting public properties end up destroying it... Traders were pursued from their goods, as everywhere was scattered by the thuggery Policemen.....
The Policemen came with cutlasses, axes, diggers, and sticks to disturb and arrest the bikers... More photos and informations will be updated.......

Stay tuned for more updates.......



Saturday, September 3

Mark Elliot Zuckerberg Came to Nigeria


Know What The Facebook Founder - Mark Elliot Zuckerberg Came to Nigeria For


The Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and co-founder of social networking website Facebook - Mark Elliot Zuckerberg visited Nigeria for the first time, arrived on Tuesday afternoon (30th August 2016), touching down in Lagos, Nigeria. He met with local businesses and developers in an effort to understand how Facebook (FB, Tech30) could “better support tech development and entrepreneurship across Africa,” the company said in a statement.

His visit included a trip to a Yaba, known as the Silicon Valley of Nigeria, where he toured a coding camp for kids and met with about 50 local startup founders and developers at CcHub, a local innovation center.

Zuckerberg had traveled to Kenya after visiting Lagos. One day after he left Lagos for Nairobi to “learn about mobile money“, Zuckerberg is back in Nigeria on on Friday 2nd September, 2016 to meet the country’s president Muhammadu Buhari and vice president, Yemi Osinbajo. Zuckerberg has also been attending a start-up demo day hosted by the country’s presidency.

Zuckerberg was in Abuja for the Aso Villa Demo Day which is a program that aims to promote entrepreneurship, innovation and economic growth through new and emerging technology.

Unfortunately, it appears like his plans have suffered an unrecoverable setback on Thursday morning when a SpaceX rocket – owned by Elon Musk exploded during a routine pre-launch check.

Exploded equipment is the Facebook/Spacecom’s AMOS-6 communications satellite, which costs $95 million according to experts estimation.

The Facebook Amos 6 Satellite was scheduled to launch into the orbit on Saturday but now that it's destroyed in the massive blast, it won't be realizable again at least for now.

The Satellite was to provide at about 14 African countries and the Middle East with free/affordable broadband. See what Mark said about the incident;

There are lots of lessons to learn from this an American programmer, Internet entrepreneur, executive, and philanthropist - Mark Elliot Zuckerberg.
His net worth is estimated to be US$53.7 billion as of August 2016, ranking him as the 5th richest person in the world. Source: Wikipedia

Upon all his wealth and personality,
  1. He keeps himself too low
  2. Still works very hard every minute of the day
  3. He appears casual most of the time.
  4. Quietly came to Nigeria (unnoticed)
  5. He trekked in the streets of Lagos without bodyguards and military men
  6. He walked around without sirens

WARNING – If You Are Studying Any Of These Courses In Nigerian Universities, You Are Not in School (SEE LIST)

BREAKING!!! NUC DROPS
WARNING – If You Are Studying
Any Of These Courses In Nigerian
Universities, You Are Not in
School (SEE LIST)
List of courses that have not been accredited in
Nigerian universities have been released – A
certificate issued for those courses will be
considered void


– The university of Abuja has the highest
number of unaccredited courses The National
Universities Commission (NUC) has released a
list of some courses that have not been
accredited.
The unaccredited courses pose serious danger
to students who study them as the certificates
issued by these universities for the courses will
not be officially recognised.
Premium Times reports that 2016 accreditation
status report indicated that these unaccredited
courses were taught in 37 out of 143
universities in the country. The Quality
Assurance Department of the NUC is in charge
of accrediting courses in the universities.
The NUC insists that for a course to be
accredited, it must meet the Benchmark
Minimum Academic Standards (BMAS) that has
been stipulated by the commission. Some of the
requirements include: “qualified faculty
members, good learning environment and
adequate teaching materials – equipment,
books and journals”.
According to the NUC, accreditation is
necessary to ensure “employers and other
members of the community that Nigerian
graduates of all academic programmes have
attained an acceptable level of competency in
their areas of specialization.” It also says it is
also important to certify courses to assure “the
international community that the programmes
offered in Nigerian Universities are of high
standards and that graduates of the institutions
are adequate for employment and further
studies.”
According to the commission, the pre-
accreditation process include “drawing up a list
of academic programmes to be certified,
compilation of list of panel chairmen/members,
time-tabling, budgeting and organizing the
accreditation coordination meeting for panel
chairmen and members in a simulation
workshop.”
The post-accreditation activities include
“analyzing accreditation reports (technical and
administrative), ranking of programmes and
universities based on their accreditation status,
publishing of accreditation status of
programmes, issuance of certificates to
programmes that earned Full and Interim
accreditation results.”
According to Premium Times, 13 federal
universities, 16 state universities and eight
private universities were running courses that
had not been accredited. Some of the high
profile institutions include University of Nigeria,
Nsukka; University of Benin, University of Jos,
University of Calabar. The biggest casualty
seems to be the University of Abuja which has
15 of its courses, including Law, unaccredited.
See full list of unaccredited courses and their
universities in the table below: S/No School
Course
1.University of Nigeria, Nsukka
Russian
Dentistry
Statistics
2. University of Benin
Anatomy
Pharmacy
3. University of Calabar
Business Management
Theatre and Media
Arts
Public Health
4. University of Jos
History and International Relations
Medical Laboratory Science
Biochemistry
Science Laboratory Technology
5. Federal University of Technology, Owerri
Architecture
Microbiology
6. Modibbo Adama University of Technology,
Yola
Banking
7. Federal University of Technology, Minna
Biology Education
Chemistry Education
Geography Education
Industrial and Technical Education
Mathematics Education
Physics Education

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