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Save a soul: A Breast Cancer Patient in Urgent Need

Pic showing the affected breast Yakubu Aisha Aijimoh 's days are numbered except with urgent financial assistance from kind-hearted individuals, NGOs and corporate bodies. She is a graduate of Economics from Kogi state University and has been lying in pain at the University Teaching Hospital, Ibadan where the sum of N700,000 is required for a surgery to remove her right breast affected by cancer. WE ARE CONSIDERING RAISING N1,000 PER FACEBOOK MEMBER (Anebira) TO SAVE HER LIFE, PLEASE VISIT WWW.EBIRAVIEW.NET FOR DETAILS. She can be reached directly on 0803 420 7243. UBA acct. No: 00690520048035. Courtesy: Ebira Youths Forum (EYF) - 0807 423 1588, 0803 825 0570

How Ebira women mourn the dead

EbiraView reviews the life of Anebira focusing on the Legends, Arts, Tradition, Festivals, Creativity and Humour. Ebira women are highly proficient in the art of mourning the dead. There are women, who, in their grief, will roll and roll on the ground – yelling like mad people. Those ones wouldn’t shed much tears, but they can be very wild to the point of threatening to kill themselves. They have to be restrained by a flock of mourners, mostly their kinswomen. The hullabaloo created by this category of mourners is a major feature in any traditional mourning scenes. There are others who will wail at the top of their voice for the first two days of the bereavement. This could lead to their losing their voice due to  excessive crying. They would then resign themselves to another phase of silent mourning, with irregular breaks of wailing in a hoarse voice. This breaks will only take place when anybody comes to condole with them. Anyhow, they would a

GOVERNMENT WOULD ERADICATE ROBBERY FROM KOGI CENTRAL – Dr. Ohikere

By Donatus Olufade     A robbery incindent along Kabba – Okene road, on the 31 st of August 2010 led to the blocking of roads around Kabba Junction in Adavi Local Government of Kogi State by Luxurious Bus drivers. The drivers complained about the incessant robbery case in Kogi State . They explained that some unsuspecting passengers in their Vehicles were transiting the State from Lagos to Abuja , only to be attacked by robbers between Kabba and Okene. Leader of the drivers, Mr. Olisa Onyia, while speaking with our correspondent, decried the spate of robbery in Kogi State . He claimed that “I have always wondered if there is government in Kogi State . If I’m traveling from Lagos to any part of the country, I’m always scared when entering Kogi State . If you are not robbed along Kabba – Okene, you’ll be robbed at Ageva. If you are not robbed at the check point in Okene, you’ll be robbed along Ajaokuta road. I don’t know if any road around Ebiraland is safe”. The Ko

2011 - Inec Inspects Nigcomsat E-Voting System

Engr. Ahmed Rufai (LeadershipNigeria) Aug. 30, 2010 In a bid to confirm the authenticity of the Nigeria Communication Satellite (NIGCOMSAT) e-Voting system ahead of the 2011 general elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday inspected the facilities. In his presentation, the managing director, NIGCOMSAT, Eng. Ahmed Rufai, said his agency had engaged in the manufacturing of the full compartment of the machine since two years in order to ensure that it is ready before the elections. Among the facilities presented are Virtual Voting Machine (e-voting system), RFID staff attendance register and access control system, GSM phone, IP -core-centre multi-media network, two-way video and voice capability for conferencing between INEC headquarters and state RECs, network to support dynamic file transmitter for uploading picture and data, among others. According to Rufai, the machines were all manufactured by the agency and are capable of assisting the c

“EBIRA HERITAGE: OUR LEGACY”

AT THE FIRST EBIRA POLITICAL REFORM CONFERENCE ORGANISED BY EBIRA ADVOCATES PRESENTED BY DR A TOM ADABA, OON , OHI ETOHUEYI OF EBIRALAND ON AUGUST 07, 2010 Protocols Introduction To the glory of God Almighty and for the peace, love and unity among our people, I share with you distinguished organisers and guests, these few thoughts which I dedicate to my bossom friend, Chief David Amodu Braimoh (DABRAS) who recently passed on to God’s glory. May his gentle soul rest in perfect peace. I congratulate the organisers of this gathering for deeming it fit to get together to share views on the way forward for our people who have been so decimated and degraded by forces that have set us against one another. Forces of marginalisation, of oppression, of hunger and indeed poverty have reduced us to a leprotic paraiah race who now eat the crumbs instead of feeding our neighbours. Our self-sufficiency and contentment which was the symbol of our pride has been snatched from us. What n

THE GOODLUCK CANDIDACY AND MINORITY RIGHTS

By: Pastor Suleiman, Joseph Manjoe The plethora of geographical entities in different sizes, all over the world, isthe contrivance of divine wisdom. God is the master-architect. In building thisworld He reckoned with diverse sizes. He fashioned the big nations and the smallnations. He designed the big tribes and the small tribes. Virtually all thingsare in sundry sizes: big men, small men, big rivers, small rivers, big trees,small trees. The sum total of all these is a universe with compelling appeal. Itfollows therefore, that any attempt by man in his own inventions to ascribemonopoly to big sizes is a curious and deliberate confrontation with divinearrangement. Characteristically, man has continually challenged the divinewisdom by suggesting and effecting his own devices. God juxtaposed minoritieswith majorities to make the world thick, but man with prejudices sought totwist this arrangement by ascribing to the minorities inferiority tag. Firstly,let us see who

Enroute Abuja: An Exhibition of Negligence

I had an exhuastive experience on saturday, the 13th August 2010 as I was heading to Lokoja around 4.30 PM after a hectic day of snapshots around Okene and environs. For what has become a regular routine, I had to stop around Federal College of Education (FCE) Okene to board a cab enroute Lokoja. The road was awash with the heavy downpour of the rain  as we approached the school gate. To my awe, a long traffic jam was right ahead and smaller vehicles were hurriedly engaging in u-turn. My friend and I dashed out of the car and ran for shelter. The more we walked, the longer the traffic so, I became curious. Though I was familiar with traffic in that part of Adavi local council, the heavy jam amidst heavy rainfall that hour drove me mad.  Travellers were stranded, impatient passengers disembarked as more heavy duty vehicles joined the long queue. I took the risk of severe damage to my camera by approaching a youth who-at my friend's request- directed me to a high building and witho