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Topic: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

  1. #3511
    Senior Member bigbrodanaija's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    Happy New Year Guyz!

    When r d letters rolling out? Any genuine info?

  2. #3512
    bb1
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    Senior Member bb1's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    M.Adam thanks for d info but is ur info source correct so that it would be like other pple predictions. I bliv NNPc will soon call us but I don't know when. I think the fuel subsidy removal will favor oil nd gas sector including NNPC. Wishing all d best and HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL.

  3. #3513
    Newbie alasela's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    Jesus army Happy new Year,biko what is da latest?

  4. #3514
    Member kessy2011's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    please any news? waiting for updates

  5. #3515
    Newbie angel4life's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    How's d whole process? Any updates? What about d thread's regular contributors? Are we still enjoying d celebrations? Then the Best.

  6. #3516
    Senior Member retired corper's Avatar
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    Well if dats d case, then its not a major problem, esopecially for those of us dat hav tasted either.



    Quote Originally Posted by iHope View Post
    A happy new year to all. My prayer is that 2012 shd be a year of employment and improved living conditions for all Nigerians. Subsidy or no subsidy.
    @ retired corper I don't know the source ur info but the issue is not the removal of upfront its basically a change in the way the cost of living allowance is calculated.
    Annually the basic salary is increased by 5-10%, and this increment now becomes ur new basic salary and its paid monthly throughout the year. This is termed the cost of living allowance.
    However the nnpc management have decided to pay this percentage upfront, thus there's no change in ur basic salary, meaning that next year unless ur salary increases by other means u r going the receive the same amt as ur cost of living allowance.
    For example if ur salary is 50000 and the cost of living allowance is 10%, under the old system u will be paid 55000 monthly till the end of the year. Then by next year with the same rate for living cost u will take home 60500 monthly. Whereas under the new system, u will be paid 60000 upront in Jan and take home ur 50000 monthly.
    That's y staff are gearing up for a showdown with management.

  7. #3517
    Senior Member retired corper's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    For those of us dat hav never tasted either.

  8. #3518
    Newbie yakmog's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    Some of us don forget this thing sef

  9. #3519
    Newbie Pavilo's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    Quote Originally Posted by seunlove View Post
    I am happy that Davo is no longer an issue on this thread. Davo, Happy new year in advanceI am not interested in dousing tension or giving a palliative that will ensure safe landing of expectations, but the recruitment process is as healthy as ever, i put a call through to a very influential senator whose interest in the process is a vested one, and he categorically told me that the agenda of cancellation has never occurred to the management of the corporation, but rather there are hard realities confronting the corporation , and on the height of it is the subsidy removal debate . We all should note that we cannot hurry the corporation, it is their show so they call the shot. we should go about our normal business without anxiety, the letters will come when they must come.Another intelligence report circulating the security circle is the series of intended coordinated bombs to be let loose by the blood thirsty boko haram on the eve of new year, we should all be on red alert and if possible avoid large assemblies because that is the current target. And also i want to place on record my reserved appreciation to the creator of all creature, the omniscient one, the most high, the king of kings for the job offers, i got two federal jobs within a week, one with the police force (ASP) and the other in a federal university, my joy knows no bound, but i wont be attending the police training billed for the 9th of January, i wouldn't want to risk my life in the name of looking for a job, the fear of boko haram is the beginning of wisdom, this blood thirsty sect have the monopoly of rascality in Nigeria, so that has left me with the other alternative of picking up the employment at the federal university and i am billed to resume by January, i reverence the name of the lord for this, and i also trust God that my NNPC letter will cap the whole success story. To the Prophets in the house, Jesus Army, even if i forget your name i cannot forget your prophecies "one thing i am sure of is that no one will remain jobless by the end of this year" (jesus army 2011). I keyed into this and i was aggressive with my job search, and now prophecies are being fulfilled, and it is my earnest prayer that those within the unemployed bracket will get a miraculous job soonest. happy new year in advance to everybody.
    GOVERNMENTS and newspapers around the world attributed the horrific Christmas Day bombings of churches in Nigeria to “Boko Haram” — a shadowy group that is routinely described as an extremist Islamist organization based in the northeast corner of Nigeria. Indeed, since the May inauguration of President Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian from the Niger Delta in the country’s south, Boko Haram has been blamed for virtually every outbreak of violence in Nigeria. But the news media and American policy makers are chasing an elusive and ill-defined threat; there is no proof that a well-organized, ideologically coherent terrorist group called Boko Haram even exists today. Evidence suggests instead that, while the original core of the group remains active, criminal gangs have adopted the name Boko Haram to claim responsibility for attacks when it suits them. The United States must not be drawn into a Nigerian “war on terror” — rhetorical or real — that would make us appear biased toward a Christian president. Getting involved in an escalating sectarian conflict that threatens the country’s unity could turn Nigerian Muslims against America without addressing any of the underlying problems that are fueling instability and sectarian strife in Nigeria. Since August, when Gen. Carter F. Ham, the commander of the United States Africa Command, warned that Boko Haram had links to Al Qaeda affiliates, the perceived threat has grown. Shortly after General Ham’s warning, the United Nations’ headquarters in Abuja was bombed, and simplistic explanations blaming Boko Haram for Nigeria’s mounting security crisis became routine. Someone who claims to be a spokesman for Boko Haram — with a name no one recognizes and whom no one has been able to identify or meet with — has issued threats and statements claiming responsibility for attacks. Remarkably, the Nigerian government and the international news media have simply accepted what he says. In late November, a subcommittee of the House Committee on Homeland Security issued a report with the provocative title: “Boko Haram: Emerging Threat to the U.S. Homeland.” The report makes no such case, but nevertheless proposes that the organization be added to America’s list of foreign terrorist organizations. The State Department’s Africa bureau disagrees, but pressure from Congress and several government agencies is mounting. Boko Haram began in 2002 as a peaceful Islamic splinter group. Then politicians began exploiting it for electoral purposes. But it was not until 2009 that Boko Haram turned to violence, especially after its leader, a young Muslim cleric named Mohammed Yusuf, was killed while in police custody. Video footage of Mr. Yusuf’s interrogation soon went viral, but no one was tried and punished for the crime. Seeking revenge, Boko Haram targeted the police, the military and local politicians — all of them Muslims. It was clear in 2009, as it is now, that the root cause of violence and anger in both the north and south of Nigeria is endemic poverty and hopelessness. Influential Nigerians from Maiduguri, where Boko Haram is centered, pleaded with Mr. Jonathan’s government in June and July not to respond to Boko Haram with force alone. Likewise, the American ambassador, Terence P. McCulley, has emphasized, both privately and publicly, that the government must address socio-economic deprivation, which is most severe in the north. No one seems to be listening. Instead, approximately 25 percent of Nigeria’s budget for 2012 is allocaated for security, even though the military and police routinely respond to attacks with indiscriminate force and killing. Indeed, according to many Nigerians I’ve talked to from the northeast, the army is more feared than Boko Haram. Meanwhile, Boko Haram has evolved into a franchise that includes criminal groups claiming its identity. Revealingly, Nigeria’s State Security Services issued a statement on Nov. 30, identifying members of four “criminal syndicates” that send threatening text messages in the name of Boko Haram. Southern Nigerians — not northern Muslims — ran three of these four syndicates, including the one that led the American Embassy and other foreign missions to issue warnings that emptied Abuja’s high-end hotels. And last week, the security services arrested a Christian southerner wearing northern Muslim garb as he set fire to a church in the Niger Delta. In Nigeria, religious terrorism is not always what it seems. None of this excuses Boko Haram’s killing of innocents. But it does raise questions about a rush to judgment that obscures Nigeria’s complex reality. Many Nigerians already believe that the United States unconditionally supports Mr. Jonathan’s government, despite its failings. They believe this because Washington praised the April elections that international observers found credible, but that many Nigerians, especially in the north, did not. Likewise, Washington’s financial support for Nigeria’s security forces, despite their documented human rights abuses, further inflames Muslim Nigerians in the north. Mr. Jonathan’s recent actions have not helped matters. He told Nigerians last week, “The issue of bombing is one of the burdens we must live with.” On New Year’s Eve, he declared a state of emergency in parts of four northern states, leading to increased military activity there. And on New Year’s Day, he removed a subsidy on petroleum products, more than doubling the price of fuel. In a country where 90 percent of the population lives on $2 or less a day, anger is rising nationwide as the costs of transport and food increase dramatically. Since Nigeria’s return to civilian rule in 1999, many politicians have used ethnic and regional differences and, most disastrously, religion for their own purposes. Northern Muslims — indeed, all Nigerians — are desperate for a government that responds to their most basic needs: personal security and hope for improvement in their lives. They are outraged over government policies and expenditures that undermine both. The United States should not allow itself to be drawn into this quicksand by focusing on Boko Haram alone. Washington is already seen by many northern Muslims — including a large number of longtime admirers of America — as biased toward a Christian president from the south. The United States must work to avoid a self-fulfilling prophecy that makes us into their enemy. Placing Boko Haram on the foreign terrorist list would cement such views and make more Nigerians fear and distrust America. Jean Herskovits, a professor of history at the State University of New York, Purchase, has written on Nigerian politics since 1970.

  10. #3520
    Senior Member bigbrodanaija's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    As against the DPR thread that is sticked to the first page of the Engineering, Oil and Gas Jobs forum, this thread has always been on the first page due to frequent posting by NNPC hopefuls.

    However, for the first time in seven months, it got relegated to the second page following NNPC hopefuls refusal to post something.

    What's really happening? Na so we go dey dey?

    It's well!

  11. #3521
    Newbie ajaokwe's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    hello house any update from any quarters? keep the hope alive.

  12. #3522
    Junior Member iHope's Avatar
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    @bidbrodanaija: lol. I think hopefuls have become wiser and have decided to move on with their lives, though still waiting anxiously.
    I have no prob being relegated to the 2nd page. Cos its better not to post lies and speculations, and increase one's bp for nothing. All I know is that we all will be surprised when the ltrs emerge.
    Meanwhile we lie in wait. Cheers.
    Quote Originally Posted by bigbrodanaija View Post
    As against the DPR thread that is sticked to the first page of the Engineering, Oil and Gas Jobs forum, this thread has always been on the first page due to frequent posting by NNPC hopefuls.

    However, for the first time in seven months, it got relegated to the second page following NNPC hopefuls refusal to post something.

    What's really happening? Na so we go dey dey?

    It's well!

  13. #3523
    Newbie professoroftruth's Avatar
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    Re: A new thread for NNPC Hopefuls

    From the information reaching me from the tower the process is still on going!

    Let's keep our fingers crossed and hope for the best.

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