Global intiative for WOMEN Empowerment e.v

Global intiative  for WOMEN Empowerment e.v Bring women, youth all people together with ideas that enable us to Fullfil dreams & give back to our family& society, be the person Lord want us to be .

Zweck des Vereins ist
die Förderung und Unterstützung von hilfsbedürftigen Frauen und/oder Ihren Kindern.. Vision
To equipped women with the relevant Ideas and Information through enterainments, in order to become successful to the society in their profession and as profession.

1.Women Initiative for self -employment.
2.Women Aid Initiative
3.Global Initiative for women empowerment
4,Women empo

werment International. To equipped women with the relevant ideas and information throught trainings, workshops and entertainments, in order to become successful to the Society in their profession and as parents. Objectives
To train women to be self-employed through small scale Initiative. To equipped women with the life transforming Ideas that would make them succed in the 21st Century. To equipeped Single parent with the information that would make them become a succeful mother
4.To encourage young women to discover and pursue their inborn abilities through talent hunts and shows .

04/01/2026

You have a worth, do you know that if yes , how do you build it to profit .

'The most dangerous cell at The Agodi Prison is known as the Single Cell. That is where they put the stubborn criminals....
04/01/2026

'The most dangerous cell at The Agodi Prison is known as the Single Cell. That is where they put the stubborn criminals. Once a person is locked inside, there is no toilet; if the inmate needs to use the restroom, it must be done inside the cell. When I was arrested last year along with Queen Naomi and the principal, the Queen was taken to the women's section while the principal was placed in a regular cell. They took me to the single cell and I was surprised, I asked the warden why I was being held there and he said it was an order from above. If you had seen me in that cell, you would have cried for me

The warden begged me that it was beyond his control. If there was a fire outbreak, we would all get burnt because there was no means of escape. There was a day I wanted to defecate, I had to do it in a bowl and keep it beside me overnight. A warden once came to visit me and he broke down in tears. I was imprisoned because I love children. I don't joke with children. Jan 1, 2025 met me in the cell. My family members visited me and were crying. I didn't deserve what happened to me. Trust nobody. God knows the person behind this and He will reward everyone accordingly' -Alhaji Oriyomi Hamzat

04/01/2026

Rise with me I need women that are interested in small scale business that are ready to make sacrifices to get results.

*_A Crab was once running on the seashore and was admiring its beautiful footprints. Suddenly a huge Wave splashed and w...
07/12/2024

*_A Crab was once running on the seashore and was admiring its beautiful footprints. Suddenly a huge Wave splashed and washed away the footprints._* *_The CRAB said to Wave "I considered you as one of my best friends, so what made you do this?" The Wave replied "A Fisherman was following your footprints, that was why I cleared it off"_* *_"RELATIONSHIPS_* *_MEANS CARING BEYOND IMAGINATION"_* *_Be your brother's keeper. Never hurt those who value you in life !!!_* *_HAVE A GREAT DAY 🙏_*

It’s happening live in my city koln ,
06/10/2024

It’s happening live in my city koln ,

01/10/2024

Give away if 5k
Drop your account. @

Nigeria 🇳🇬 Independence Day Definitions from Oxford Languages ·
If yes explain if no explain
free from outside control; not subject to another's authority.
Are we free?

Has anything changed ?THIS PRESENT DARKNESS.Before he died in 2015, the late Professor Stephen Ellis wrote his last book...
28/09/2024

Has anything changed ?

THIS PRESENT DARKNESS.
Before he died in 2015, the late Professor Stephen Ellis wrote his last book titled ‘This Present Darkness: A History of Nigerian Organised Crime’. Going through this book left me with several thoughts, most of them unpleasant.

It is a fascinating read covering, not just organised crime, but the evolution of the Nigerian state (or maybe they are the same thing?). At any rate, I want to share 8 random things I found interesting in the book and I will leave you to draw your own conclusions.

1. In 1947, late Chief Obafemi Awolowo wrote that “Corruption is the greatest defect of the Native Court system.” He complained that not only did judges take bribes, people used their connections to enrich themselves and avoid punishment for their crimes. He also wrote that in the north, a new Emir always removed all the people appointed by the previous Emir and replaced them with his own people. He wrote all these as a complaint against the Indirect Rule system favoured by the British.

2. In 1922, the Colonial Secretary in London, one Winston Churchill, wrote to Nigeria’s Governor General at the time, Sir Hugh Clifford, asking him to ban certain types of letters called ‘Charlatanic correspondences’. This was because J.K Macgregor who was Principal of Hope Waddell Training Institute in Calabar for 36 years, had discovered hundreds of letters written and received by his students ordering all sorts of books, charms and even potions from England, America and India in particular. Most of the charms were nonsense and the students were invariably asked to send more money if they wanted more powerful ones. A total of 2,855 such letters were intercepted by the Posts & Telegraph Department between 1935 and 1938.

3. In 1939, a Nigerian businessman based in Ghana named Prince Eikeneh, wrote to the colonial government in Nigeria complaining about the number of Nigerian girls who were coming to Ghana to work as s*x workers. He said the girls were usually taken there by a Warri-based Madam named ‘Alice’ who told the girls they were going to learn a trade or get married. He concluded that the trade was very well-organised and profitable for the ring leaders.

4. In 1950, Abubakar Tafewa Balewa said ‘the twin curses of bribery and corruption pervade every rank and department of government’. At that time, the word ‘awoof’ was already being used to describe how civil servants used their positions to enrich themselves. In 1952, an anti-corruption campaigner named Eyo A. Akak from Etinan in today's Akwa Ibom state complained that Nigerians were abandoning farming for trade due to materialism and consumerism. He said that every ex-serviceman now wanted to own a Raleigh bicycle before going back to his village while every civil servant wanted to own a car. He even blamed women (partly) for this because all of them only wanted to marry rich men.

5. In 1959, there were 60,000 school graduates in the Western Region. By the following year, the number had increased to 200,000. However, this led to a now familiar problem. By 1963, primary education was turning out 180,000 graduates a year but only 80,000 of them could find jobs, according to the Regional Minister of Finance. The same minister also said he was ‘looking for a method to crackdown on school principals who were collecting money from students for a variety of services’.

6. In 1968, a Polish-British sociologist named Stanislav Andreski coined the term ‘kleptocracy’ to describe the system of government he found in Nigeria. He said ‘Nigeria is the most perfect example of kleptocracy since power itself rests on the ability to bribe’.

7. In 1975, a report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the shortage of petroleum products found that a lot of the petrol being imported into Nigeria (due to the inability of the Port-Harcourt refinery to meet local demand) was being smuggled to Chad and Niger Republic. As soon as NNPC was formed, people swarmed around it and all sorts of people got crude oil lifting contracts. The US Embassy in Paris reported in 1973 that a random American walked into the Embassy and showed them a contract he had to lift 2 million tons of Nigerian crude oil. He told the Embassy that ‘a great deal of under the table payments were taking place in Nigeria to obtain crude oil’.

8. Around 1979, a British bank, Johnson Matthey collaborated with the Central Bank of Nigeria to export huge amounts of forex from Nigeria on behalf of politicians like Alhaji Umaru Dikko in contravention of foreign exchange controls. The bank later collapsed due to unsecured loans to Nigeria and had to be bailed out by the Bank of England with £100m in 1984 – the first time the Bank of England had ever rescued a private bank in British history. It also led to the passing of the Insolvency Act by Margaret Thatcher’s government in 1986. One of the directors of the bank, Vasant Advani, ran to Nigeria in 1986 but returned to the UK in 2008 for treatment when he was diagnosed with cancer. In 2011, at the age of 67, he was sentenced to 16 months in prison for the fraud that brought down that bank. No official on the Nigerian side, to the best of my knowledge, was ever convicted.

What do these stories tell us? Is Nigeria hopeless or cursed? Can things ever change? Have we always been this way or is it a recent thing?

The answer is what you say it is.

27/09/2024

In Germany 🇩🇪 you can can not use recorded audio in court if the other party is not aware of it.

19/09/2024

Always remember Tenacity is a key to success in life.people fail due to their negative reaction to unpleasant situations or circumstan

12/09/2024

Income does not determine wealth;knowledge does, minimise expenses save,invest ,don’t keep liabilities,keep assets.

12/09/2024

Money won’t make you rich excess of wealth has ruined many people lack of money &thirst for money is responsible for most crimes &violence.

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