Backgrounds in Nigeria
MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 2013, 10:03 pm - "SPILE: MAGAZINE OF SOCIAL CRITICS"
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(From the Editor: This is an old publication, and it draws parallels between the two oil states - Russia and Nigeria. But we saw very many similarities between Nigeria and Ukraine, so we decided to publish this material)
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They use iPhones, go to nightclubs, drive around in expensive foreign cars, attend fashion shows, and occupy apartments in "business class" buildings.
Looking at them, it is hard to believe that obscurantism, dirt and poverty reign just a few steps away from this world of glamor.
The Interpreter has decided to give sketches of Nigerian life in the form of "assorted", mixing bravura-glamorous photographs and the "truth of life" - the seamy side of the Nigerian lower classes.
In principle, if you take the major Russian media outlets, then the description of Russian life in it will also consist of such a mixture.
The story of Philip Kirkorov's mental anguish will coexist with the story of the lawlessness of the next cop, and hidden advertising describing the new Porsche Caye Backgrounds in Nigeria nne model - with information about the release of the next slaves from bondage.
Nigeria's national motto is "Peace and Unity, Strength and Progress."
The Constitution of Nigeria, like the Constitution of the Russian Federation, allows one person to be the president of the country no more than two times in a row. The reign of Olusegun Obasanjo, elected at the end of 1999, was characterized by the Western media as unsuccessful, but stable.
However, the immense love of the Nigerians allowed the president to be easily re-elected in 2003, after which the term "2007 problem" appeared in the Nigerian press.
Obasanjo has often repeated that it will take time to complete the reforms he has begun, and his term will expire in May 2007. At the same time, the Nigerian leader emphasized his commitment to democracy and stated that he was not going to change the political system.
Talk of a successor began after MPs from the ruling People's Democratic Party proposed a constitutional amendment giving Obasanjo a third term. However, this amendment was rejected by the president himself.
At the party convention on December 24, 2006, Olusegun Obasanjdo said: "I would like to congratulate my brother, who will be my best successor."
https://jiji.ng/388-backgrounds
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