THIS
IS BASED ON EVERYONE JUST GETTING 2 participants (if you have more than
2 you can help you downline by placing these people under them)
LEVEL 1: 2 x 0.03btc = 0.06btc – 0.05btc (upgrade to level 2) = 0.01btc profit per month
LEVEL 2: 4 x 0.05btc = 0.2btc – 0.1btc (upgrade to level 3) = 0.1btc profit per month
LEVEL 3: 8 x 0.1btc = 0.8btc – 0.2btc (upgrade to level 4) = 0.6btc profit per month
LEVEL 4: 16 x 0.2btc = 3.2btc – 1btc (upgrade to level 5) = 2.2btc profit per month
LEVEL 5: 32 x 1btc = 32btc – 2btc (upgrade to level 6) = 30btc profit per month
LEVEL 6: 64 x 2btc = 128btc profit per month
LET'S WORK TOGETHER AS A TEAM
NB!! NB!! NB!! AS SOON AS YOU RECEIVED ENOUGH ON EVERY LEVEL TO STEP UP TO THE NEXT LEVEL, DO SO IMMEDIATELY!!!
ON LEVEL 1 STEP UP AFTER YOUR FIRST 2 DONATIONS
ON LEVEL 2 STEP UP AFTER YOUR FIRST 2 DONATIONS
ON LEVEL 3 STEP UP AFTER YOUR FIRST 2 DONATIONS
ON LEVEL 4 STEP UP AFTER YOUR FIRST 5 DONATIONS
ON LEVEL 5 STEP UP AFTER YOUR FIRST 2 DONATIONS
ON LEVEL 6 ENJOY YOUR MASSIVE PROFITS!!! NEXT MONTH YOU WILL BE RECEIVING IT ALL OVER AGAIN!
REMEMBER
IF YOU KEEP MONEY WANTING TO BE SURE YOU RECEIVE ALL PAYMENTS, YOU MAY
END UP LOSING ON OTHER PAYMENTS BECAUSE OF SOMEONE ELSE THAT IS
COMMITTED AND DETERMINED TO STEP UP TO THE NEXT LEVEL, THEY WILL PAY AND
THE SYSTEM WILL SKIP YOU.
AWCON: Florence Omagbemi is a very good coach – Okobi
Nigeria’s
women midfielder Ngozi Okobi has described coach Florence Omagbemi as a very good
coach after earning her first start in the 2016 Africa Women’s Cup of
Nations against Kenya on Saturday.
The 23-year-old opened scoring
in the Super Falcons’ 4-0 thrashing of the Harambee Starlets at the
Limbe Omnisport Stadium to reach the semi-final after finishing Group B
atop.
Okobi who has 26 international caps had played under
Omagbemi while serving as assistant coach at the Japan 2012 Fifa U20
Women’s World Cup.
“This
is my first start in the African Women’s Cup of Nations 2016. I’m very
very happy with this opportunity and scoring too,” Okobi said.
“This is not the first time I’ve been working with coach Florence Omagbemi. I began working with her since 2012.
“She
is a very good coach and very special to me. She nicknamed me skilful.
She is one the coaches that saw my potential and believes I’m a very
good player.
“She told me, ‘you’re special, you’re different and
have what other players don’t’. Those words are still what is keeping me
going right now.
Imagine the small African region with more refugees than the whole of Europe?
Ali Kawu,
a 25-year old man, escaped with his wife and their three children, following a raid on his village by the dreaded Boko Haram militants. They left behind their papers, six sacks of beans,
up to 15 dead neighbours, and 10 kidnapped villagers. Then they walked
all day and all night.
“Every minute I would look back to see if they were following us,”
Kawu says, shortly after reaching the safety of Monguno, a town
recaptured from Boko Haram last year. “Walking forward, looking back,
walking forward, looking back. I thought it was the end of my life.”
But safety doesn’t mean comfort. Kawu is just the latest of
approximately 140,000 displaced people sheltering in this remote town of
60,000 people. North-east Nigeria has been hit by a displacement crisis
that dwarfs any migration flows seen in Europe in recent years.
Since the Boko Haram insurgency began, more people have migrated to
Monguno alone than left all of north Africa for Europe in the first nine
months of this year.
One upshot is a food crisis that the UN warns might see hundreds of thousands die from famine next year.
About 40% more people have been displaced throughout Borno state (1.4
million) than reached Europe by boat in 2015 (1 million). Across the
region, the war against Boko Haram has forced more people from their
homes – 2.6 million – than there are Syrians in Turkey, the country that
hosts more refugees than any other.
The comparisons mirror a wider trend across Africa. Of the world’s 17
million displaced Africans, 93.7% remain inside the continent, and just
3.3% have reached Europe, according to UN data supplied privately to
the Guardian.
“No matter how many problems Europeans have, it’s nothing like this,”
summarises Modu Amsami, the informal leader of Monguno’s nine camps for
internally displaced people (IDP), as he strolls past Kawu’s newly
erected hut. “Please, I’m appealing to Europeans to forget their minor
problems. Let them come here and face our major problems.”
For 18 months, Monguno endured its migration crisis largely alone.
Amsami is an IDP but decided to run Monguno’s nine camps himself in the
absence of any government officials. It was not until this June, a year
and a half after the Nigerian army retook the town from Boko Haram, that
aid groups and civil servants felt safe to return.
“We were shaken by what we saw,” says Mathieu Kinde, an aid worker
with Alima, a medical NGO that was the first to arrive. Many people were
starving, having been cut off from their farmland. There was a polio
outbreak – Nigeria’s first case in two years. Just one government doctor
was left in the town.
To this day, the townspeople cannot farm their fields – Boko Haram
remains too close to the town’s perimeter. Aid convoys from Maiduguri,
the state capital, risk ambush. Most food can arrive only by helicopter,
which is how the Guardian reached the town. The number of people in a
famine-like state has been slightly reduced, but every week Alima treats
up to 200 new cases of malnutrition. “The situation remains alarming,”
says Kinde.
About 68 miles (110km) to the south, Maiduguri seems calmer. It
remains under curfew but the roads into the city are largely secure, the
streets are clean and its nightlife is reportedly experiencing a
tentative revival. But if you know where to look, it is a city under
extreme pressure.
More than 600,000 IDPs have migrated to this city of just 1.1 million
during peacetime over the past three years, according to the
International Organisation for Migration
(IOM). About a quarter have been put up in half-built schools, or in
housing projects intended for teachers and civil servants. The rest have
been taken in by friends and relatives.
“It’s an amazing story,” says Toby Lanzer,
the UN’s assistant secretary general for the Sahel and the Lake Chad
region. According to Lanzer, the local community has in effect said: “We
built that as a school, but you [IDPs can] have it. And we built that
as a new neighbourhood, but we will put you lot in it. How’s that for
generosity, Europe?”
But that
generosity has come at a price, says the governor of Borno state, the
province where the majority of the fighting and displacement has taken
place. Unemployment in Maiduguri has exceeded 50% since the start of the
crisis, says the governor, Kashim Shettima, while more beggars gather
at the major road junctions because the IDPs have few means of
alternative income.
“Health facilities are at breaking point,” he says. “All resources
have become overstretched. We ask all people of conscience to help.”
“Getting food became so difficult after my husband was killed [by
Boko Haram],” says one mother, whose malnourished three-year-old lies
motionless on the bed beside her. “I would beg every day but I wouldn’t
get more than 100 naira [25p] a day. And that’s how he got hungry.”
Photograph Credit: Patrick Kingsley for the Guardian
Amnesty International, have it that Nigerian
security forces have killed no fewer than 150 people in a series of attacks
against the largely peaceful pro-Biafra movement.
The
report finds "overwhelming evidence that Nigerian security forces
committed gross human rights violations" at a number of public
gatherings in the country's southern region since August 2015.
Pro-Biafran protestors gather in Onitsha, Nigeria on May 30 2016.
In
what the human rights group calls "a chilling campaign," security
forces were apparently responsible for the extrajudicial killings,
detentions, and torture of supporters of the Indigenous People of Biafra
(IPOB), a group that is pushing for an independent Biafran state in
Nigeria's oil-rich southeast.
"This
deadly repression of pro-Biafra activists is further stoking tensions
in the southeast of Nigeria," said Makmid Kamara, Interim Director of Amnesty International Nigeria.
"This
reckless and trigger-happy approach to crowd control has caused at
least 150 deaths and we fear the actual total might be far higher,"
Kamara said.
The report was based on the analysis of 87 videos and 122 photographs, along with 146 witness interviews.
It
states that many of the abuses occurred around the Biafra Remembrance
Day celebrations on May 30, 2016, in Onitsha, Anambra State.
Security
forces raided homes the night before the event and then opened fire the
next day with live ammunition on a crowd of approximately 1,000 people,
the report says.
A 26-year-old man
interviewed in the report said was at the rally when he was shot and
then hid from security forces in a gutter.
This 26-year-old man says he had acid sprayed on him on Biafra Remembrance Day in Onitsha.
He said that when soldiers found him they poured acid on him.
"I
covered my face. I would have been blind by now," he told Amnesty
International. "He poured acid on my hands. My hands and body started
burning. The flesh was burning... They dragged me out of the gutter.
They said I'll die slowly."
The report acknowledges that some protesters threw stones, burned tires and in at least one incident, shot at police.
"These acts of violence and disorder did not justify the level of force used against the whole assembly," the report reads.
Nigerian
military spokesman Colonel Sani Usman said: "We wish to debunk the
insinuation that our troops perpetrated the killing of defenseless
agitators.
This is an outright
attempt to tarnish the reputation of the security forces in general and
the Nigerian Army in particular, for whatever inexplicable parochial
reasons.
"For umpteenth times, the
Nigerian Army has informed the public about the heinous intent of this
Non-Governmental Organisation," Usman added, "which is never relenting
in dabbling into our national security in manners that obliterate
objectivity, fairness and simple logic."
The
Biafra movement calls for an independent state in the majority Igbo
region in Nigeria's oil producing southeast. Supporters of the
independence movement claim the region has been marginalized from
government participation and development.
The
Igbo are one of the largest ethnic groups in Africa's most populous
nation, and their historical grievances carry over after the Nigerian
Civil War, which started in 1967 and was largely fought to repress the
Igbo secessionist movement. The Igbo lost the war, which ended in 1970.
Study Shows That Africans, Caribbean Immigrants Are Healthier Than African-Americans
An African-American, born and raised in Philadelphia and
had only been in the States for a month, said one thing he didn’t enjoy
about returning home was the weight gain. So far, he had gained 15
pounds.
According to him, he thinks part of the reason for his weight gain is because
the food over there is horrible.
“A
new study from the city’s Health Department examining health
discrepancies among black New Yorkers found that Caribbean and African
immigrants tend to have fewer health problems like asthma and obesity
than American-born blacks.
American-born blacks are also more apt to smoke and drink than blacks who are originally from other countries, the study says.
Some 53% of American blacks labeled themselves as drinkers, compared with 44% of Caribbeans and 34% of Africans.
No black group drinks as much as white New Yorkers, 70% of whom reported being drinkers, the study found.”
The
health distinction between Diaspora and native Africans does not stop
there. As the article notes, African-Americans have a greater
percentages of obesity, asthma and high-blood pressure than our West
Indian and African counterparts.
In fact, the only illness category in which all Blacks rated the same was diabetes (between 13 and 14 percent).
Although
this particular health department study doesn’t spell out other factors
that might contribute to the health gap (outside of smoking and
drinking), its findings underscores previous research, which contrasts
the health benefits between African-Americans and traditional South
African diets.
In that study, which was published in April of
2015, colon cancer researchers at the University of Pittsburgh switched
the diets of 20 African-Americans and 20 South Africans in a two week
period span.
“In
this time, the Africans consumed traditional American food — meat and
cheese high in fat content — while African Americans took on a
traditional African diet — high in fiber and low in fat, with plenty of
vegetables, beans, and cornmeal, with little meat.
After the
exchange, researchers performed colonoscopies on both groups and found
that those in the African diet group increased the production of
butyrate, a fatty acid proven to protect against colon cancer. Members
of the American diet group, on the other hand, developed changes in
their gut that scientists say precede the development of cancerous
cells.”
Checkout What President-Elect Donald Trump Said About Working Visas to the U.S
President-Elect Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the University of Wisconsin Eau Claire.
Photo:
Evan Vucci/Associated Press
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Monday said his administration
will scrutinize what he called “abuses” of visas amid speculation that
he intends to restrict the flow of skilled workers into his country.
In a two-minute video posted on YouTube, Mr. Trump for the first time
since the Nov. 8 election articulated to the public what he plans to do
during his first 100 days in office.
“On immigration,” Mr. Trump said, “I will direct the Department of
Labor to investigate all abuses of visa programs that undercut the
American worker.”
He didn’t elaborate on specific programs or provide details on the so-called abuses.
Tens of thousands of mostly Indian citizens enter the U.S. on high-skilled worker, or H-1B, visas every year, and analysts say Mr. Trump could target the program for tougher vetting.
That would be bad news for India’s outsourcing industry, which has
long been sending programmers and engineers to the U.S. on such visas.
A spokeswoman for Indian outsourcing firm Infosys Ltd. declined to
comment on Mr. Trump’s remarks. India’s largest software exporter by
revenue, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., and large outsourcing firm
Wipro Ltd. didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A
spokeswoman for the National Association of Software and Services
Companies, a trade body, didn’t immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Zimbabwean First Lady, Grace Mugabe Says She Will Take Over As President When Her Husband Retires
Mrs Grace Mugabe, Zimbabwean
first lady, has announced herself as the new president who will
take over from her husband, Robert Mugabe when he finally steps down as the No. 1 citizen of the country, due to his health issues.
Robert
Mugabe, is the world's oldest and one of the longest serving Head of
State at 92 years old. Mugabe having ruled for over 30 years, was
reportedly advised to drop out of the 2018 election race by his medical
doctors, which possibly is the main reason he is forcing himself into
retirement.
Speaking
at a gathering over the weekend, Mashonaland West women’s league
chairperson, Angeline Muchemeyi revealed that Grace Mugabe who has been
the league secretary since 2014, told them that there is no point for
her fighting for a lesser position after several plans and arrangements
had been made with the ailing president to hand over the role of the
state affairs to her.
According to her, ‘I’m the wife
of the president, I’m the president already … I plan and do everything
with the president, what more do I want, for now the position of the
women boss is enough.’
According to Wikipaedia
''Chinedu Okoli, better known by his stage name Flavour N'abania or
simply Flavour, is a Nigerian singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist
and performer. He began his musical career as a drummer for a local church in his hometown of Enugu State.
Checkout conjoined twins born in Gaza with two heads, two hearts and one body fighting for life in incubator
These
babies, born with two heads, two
hearts, two lungs, two spines and two hands and legs, but only one chest
and one stomach.
The twin were born on Tuesday November 22, and are the first conjoined babies recorded for many years in the Palestine city.
Born
at al-Shifa Hospital in Ma'an at 11am, the babies have two heads, two
hearts, two lungs, two spines and two hands and legs, but only one chest
and one stomach.
Dr Ayman al-Sahbani, head of the emergency and media department at the hospital, added that this is a very rare condition.
The gender of the unnamed little ones remains unclear, as they have been called male in some reports and female in others.
Al-Shifa - which means "house of healing" in Arabic - is
the largest hospital in the Gaza Strip, with a specialist neonatal unit
for dealing with premature and special births.
In 2010, the first conjoined twins ever to be born in Gaza died after being rushed to Saudi Arabia for specialist treatment.
Saudi Arabi's world renowned facilities for dealing with conjoined twins were offered by King Abdullah.
But
their path to treatment was reportedly filled with setbacks including
passport and travelling rights from the disputed territory where they
were born. They died at the age of two weeks from a bacterial chest infection.
Man without arms turned down for housing loan because he couldn't provide fingerprint identification
A young man without arms who applied for a loan to buy his own home was denied
getting the money since he could not provide fingerprints to identify
himself.
The
incredible case of the 25-year-old who was barred from an essential
housing loan has revealed a bureaucratic failure in a system which
believes signatures are not legally binding.
The prospective homeowner, Wu Jianping, lost both his arms after receiving a severe electric shock when he was five.
Although he is able to form a signature by writing with a
pen held in his mouth, banks where he lives in Zhengzhou, Henan province
in China, require a fingerprint to, of which he has none.
According to an employee, as reported by China Daily, "Fingerprinting is a common practice because signatures
can be imitated, but there is no way to copy a fingerprint".
Thanks
to the publicity garnered by the young man's plight, some of the banks
which had turned him down since November 14 have since changed their
minds.
Imagine! Toyin Aimakhu’s Ex-Lover Caught With 9 Stolen iPhones In Computer Village (See photos)
Reports reaching us have it that Nollywood actress, Toyin Aimakhu's ex-boyfriend, Seun Egbeegbe was arrested, earlier this morning, at Computer village, for allegedly stealing iPhones.
The culprit has since been handed over to the police, after being beating up by angry mob.
An eyewitnesses claimed that Egbeegbe went to a certain Keelcech
Innovations Store in computer village, took two iPhone 7 and some iPhone
6+ and told the sales girl he was coming, and then crossed to enter a
taxicab.It was after he left that it dawned on one of the sales rep that someone
packed phones, so they rushed and caught up with Egbegbe. He had,
however, allegedly already given one of his staff, the iPhone 7 and that
staff escaped, but Seun was caught.
Benita Okojie Set To Go Down The Aisle - Recounts How Le Boo Proposed
Do you remember singer, Benita Okojie?
Olawale Adeyina met Benita Okojie while they both attended Redeemers
University. The gospel artiste, who released the pre-wedding photos,
spoke about how her man's proposal.
“We attended the same
university – Redeemers University. We started out as friends and after
we graduated, he wanted us to be more than friends. I prayed and asked
my mum for her counsel and I felt a certain peace so I consented and I
Thank God for what we share and how far we’ve come.
Olawale and
my sister Bella are very good friends and business partners which is one
of the things that drew me to him because my sister and I are very
close. Over the years, in the course of our relationship, both of them
have been able to team up and surprise me on several occasions and it
can be annoying because together they pull great surprises for me and I
never have the slightest clue beforehand. So I knew he would also get
my sister involved when he was ready to pop the question.
Anyway,
one morning, The Nerd (as I like to call him) called me and we gisted
as usual, after we did he asked to speak with my sister under the guise
of work related stuff. He said she needed to go to the office to turn in
a client’s job as soon as possible. I had no idea they had planned to
go to the ring store. After their conversation, we made plans to go and
see a movie
I went to get ready and we had agreed that he
would pick me up at 12 pm. when it was 12, there was no sign of him. 1pm
passed, then 2pm… he still hadn’t come. I called to ask him why he was
taking long. He apologized and said he had to get a job done for a
client but he was on his way. When he came home, he came with my sister
and she was forming vexing, that they didn’t open the gate early. It was
part of her script. Lol.
I was so concerned with us getting
to the movies early to watch a particular movie that I didn’t notice
anything strange. I went to get something outside and when I came back
to the living room, I saw him kneeling with a box. I just started
screaming and running round the house. I don’t remember anything he
said. My mum had to ask me to “give him an answer o”. It’s one day I
will not forget in a hurry.
Man beaten and tied to a pole for allegedly stealing a car battery
" Everyday for the thief...one day for the owner " A notorious thief who is very popular for stealing people’s motor
batteries at night was caught at a market junction in Rumumasi, Port
Harcourt, Rivers state.
He was caught while trying to break into a man’s car by security guards in the area.
The security guards beat him blue-black before tying him to a pole. He has been taken to a police station for
prosecution.
Hillary Clinton "couldn't stop crying" once she
learned of her loss to Donald Trump on Tuesday, best-selling
conservative author Ed Klein told Newsmax TV on Wednesday.
"About 6:30 this morning she called an old friend," he began on "The
Steve Malzberg Show" in an interview. "She was crying, inconsolably.
"She couldn't stop crying.
"Her friend said — her female friend from way, way, back — said that
it was even hard to understand what she was saying, she was crying so
hard.
"This is Hillary we're talking about," Klein said.
"Eventually," he continued, "her friend said she could make out that
she was blaming James Comey, the director of the FBI, for her loss — and
this I don't understand exactly — and the president of the United
States for not doing enough."
Klein said his source then asked further about President Barack Obama.
"She said: 'Well, she felt, Hillary felt, that the president could
have stopped Comey a long time ago, because that's what [former
President] Bill [Clinton] said."
* Well, i was surprised to see Trump emerge as the winner of that election.*