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Daddy Freeze Reacts As Woman Attacks Side Chick Who Slept With Her Husband

Controversial OAP Daddy Freeze has slammed a woman in a viral video who attacked her husband’s side chick for having anal sex with him.

Speaking on the video, Daddy Freeze sympathized with the woman but faulted her reaction.

According to him, she should have directed her grievances to a court of law instead of violently attacking the side chick.

Daddy Freeze wrote: “Although I sympathize with the woman whose husband allegedly Cheated…

The pain of a woman cheated upon is deep… However, she should be guided… Hitting the alleged side chick is assault and battery and the lady could sue her.

Dear women, when I say marriage is NOT an achievement, you won’t listen. If the woman didn’t see marriage as an achievement, she would have directed her grievances through the courts. A dissolution of marriage instead of this embarrassment, would have done all the parties involved a lot more good.

Also, it seems the husband had a sexual preference, leading to needs that the wife couldn’t satisfy. If this were the case, how many side chicks does the wife want to beat in supermarkets??

Remember it wasn’t the side chick that walked the isle with you, it was your husband deal with him”.

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NNPC, Marketers In War Over Fuel Scarcity 

 

Lifestyle Nigeria gathered that the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation has blamed the lingering fuel scarcity in the country on panic buying and sharp practices by some petroleum marketers who are exploiting the present situation to make more money.

The company also vowed that the fuel queues across the country would end next week, noting that it had enough litres of fuel to end the scarcity.

Petroleum marketers, however, disagreed with the position of the NNPC, insisting that inadequate supply was a major reason for the persisting fuel scarcity.

Recall that on Tuesday, the NNPC spokesperson, Femi Soneye, assured that the ongoing shortage in supply of petroleum products and queues for the products would be cleared by May 1.

According to him, the company had more than 1.5 billion litres of petroleum products available, enough to last for at least 30 days. He added that some individuals might be exploiting the situation to maximise profit.

The Major Energies Marketers Association of Nigeria had in a statement said its members in Apapa and other locations in Lagos had received 300 million litres of fuel from eight vessels this week.

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Court electricity tariff – .

A Federal High Court sitting in Kano has issued an order restraining the National Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the Kano Electricity Distribution Company from implementing the new electricity tariff for Band A consumers.

The suit marked FHC/KN/CS/144/2024 was filed by Super Sack Company Limited and BBY Sacks Limited.

Others are Mama Sannu Industries Limited, Dala Foods Nigeria Limited, Tofa Textile Limited, and Manufacturers Association Of Nigeria Limited.

However, ruling on an ex-parte motion by Abubakar Mahmoud, counsel to the plaintiffs, the presiding judge, Abdullahi Liman, ordered NERC and KEDCO from going ahead with the impending tariff pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice filed before it.

The order also restrained the defendant from intimidating and threatening to disconnect the applicants’ electricity supply for non-acceptance of the new increased tariff.

In April, NERC approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A classification.

With the new tariff, customers under the category, who receive 20 hours of electricity supply daily, were to begin to pay N225 per kilowatt, effectively from April 3 — up from N66.

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The sudden hike has since been criticized by the House of Representatives and other stakeholders who have asked NERC to suspend the implementation of the new tariff.

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University Entry Age Is About Nature And Nurture – Lifestyle Nigeria

I read a story that the “Minister of Education, Prof Tahir Mamman, has released a directive that admission to tertiary institutions should not be given to candidates less than 18 years. Prof Mamman gave the directive while monitoring the 2024 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) in Bwari, Federal Capital Territory recently.

The Minister said that “the 18-year-old benchmark is in line with the 6-3-3-4 system of education.  The minimum age of entry into the University is 18, but we have seen students who are 15, 16 years going in for the entrance examination.”

When I went to school in the 70s and 80s, we spent six years in primary school, five years in secondary school and a minimum of four years in the university, depending on the course we studied. In the 80s, some of my contemporaries entered the university at 16 and graduated at 20 years. The entry age at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, where I studied, was 16 years. It was strictly enforced. I remember a girl who entered at 15 years. Record keeping then was manual.

It took a while before the school found out. She was expelled. She went back to write JAMB Exam and re-entered the same department. She lost two years. I also know a girl who entered the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) at age 15. She was very intelligent, but her parents felt she was too young. They withdrew her and she got admission at 16 in the University of Ibadan where she graduated second class upper.

She went on to have a brilliant career and remains the only African to get to the position of vice president in the multinational company where she worked until she retired. She is happily married with children doing great in their various endeavours. Like their mother, these children graduated between 20 and 21 years depending on the courses they studied, but they entered the university at 16 to 17.

I know some other students who entered the university at age 16-17. Some rose to become CEOs of financial institutions and manufacturing companies. Some set up businesses with billions of naira in turnover.

My reaction to the minister’s pronouncement is based on my personal experience in the last 40 years (1984 to 2024). First, let me acknowledge my ignorance of the stipulation of 18 years as the minimum age of entry into Nigerian universities based on the 6-3-3-4. I am ignorant of it because it was never implemented. But even with 6-3-3-4, it is still possible to graduate before 22 years. I know many students who graduated at 20 years since the 6-3-3-4 system of education started.

They are doing great in their various endeavours, which calls to question if the policy was well thought out ab initio. Some of these graduates who left school at 20 got jobs where older applicants failed. One of such who graduated at 20 got employed by the company where he did youth service because he was too good to be let go. Truth be told, the 6-3-3-4 system never achieved some of its goals. For instance, we were told then that students who drop out of school after junior or secondary school would have been equipped with technical skills to earn a living, but that has not been the case.

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