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Miscellaneous / Verschiedenes » alt.tv.simpsons » Good news from Nigeria
Good news from Nigeria [message #265903] Sa, 13 Mai 2006 12:33
Notifier Deamon  
Post removed (X-No-Archive: yes)
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265905 ] Sa, 13 Mai 2006 15:43
Notifier Deamon  
Post removed (X-No-Archive: yes)
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265906 ] Sa, 13 Mai 2006 18:07
CHRIS  
Obviously this is a result of Slavery.

If the traders hadn't of bought the stupid niggers captured by rival tribes,
they would have gone on to pass such wisdom as don't steal. Perhaps even
evolving to such hights of wisdom as to don't us steal gasoline by candle
light.

Good ridden to the crispy niggers.

Perhaps US inner cities can have open gas mains too?


'
"Mastic" <not [at] thisaddress> wrote in message
news:kedb62d8n72ho1m6rpgs1ftc09v6j0defs [at] 4ax.com...
>
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/N/NIGERIA_PIPELINE_BLAS T?SITE=VANOV&SEC
TION=HOME
>
> May 12, 5:24 PM EDT
>
> Nigerian pipeline blast kills up to 200
>
>
> ILADO, Nigeria (AP) -- Gasoline gushing from a ruptured pipeline
> exploded Friday as villagers scavenged for fuel, setting off an
> inferno that killed up to 200 and left charred bodies scattered around
> the site in this oil-rich country of mostly poor people.
>
> Grim-faced rescue workers swung corpses into a mass grave as dozens of
> other scorched bodies awaited collection. It appeared some victims
> tried to flee the unfolding disaster only to be overtaken by flames
> spreading across the fuel slick.
>
> The stark outlines of white skeletons lay against a beach charred
> black by fire. Other bodies floated alongside dozens of plastic
> jerrycans in the nearby waters of the coastal mangrove swamp. The
> jerrycans, which had contained pilfered gas, were twisted by the heat
> of the explosion.
>
> More than 1,000 people in Nigeria, Africa's oil giant, have died in
> recent years when fuel they were pilfering from pipelines caught fire
> - and officials said it would likely happen again.
>
> "Because this thing has happened many times before, we thought it
> would be a deterrent, but apparently it wasn't enough deterrent for
> these people who died," said Lagos State Health Commissioner Tola
> Kasali, surveying the scene near Ilado, about 30 miles east of the
> main city of Lagos.
>
> "Anywhere you have a pipeline in this country, you have this problem
> because people are greedy and they want quick money," Kasali said.
>
> It was not known what set off the fire. An FBI official in Washington
> said the bureau was working on the case but did not explain whether
> foul play was suspected. The FBI often gets involved in criminal
> investigations abroad when Americans are involved or when asked by the
> host country.
>
> Police and rescue workers said villagers were collecting the gushing
> gas when the fuel ignited, and Lagos Police Commissioner Emmanuel
> Adebayo said 150 to 200 people died. The Red Cross had said it was
> treating survivors, but no live victims were seen.
>
> A-P correspondent Edward Harris reports in Nigeria, people often
> tamper with the pipelines seeking fuel for cooking or resale on the
> black market.
>
> By day's end, about 100 of the dead had been interred, and Kasali said
> cleanup efforts would resume Saturday.
>
> He said the uncollected bodies pose a health risk to the millions of
> inhabitants of Lagos, whose skyline could be seen on the horizon.
>
> "We just decided to give them a mass burial because no one can
> recognize them - even their family members can't identify them," he
> said. "We're concerned that if we don't do that, we'll create a health
> emergency in Lagos since it happened by the shore and the water will
> just flow back into the city."
>
> The blaze took place far from the center of the fishing village of
> Ilado, and it was unclear if there were witnesses. Boatsmen said they
> heard an explosion before dawn and saw the glow of flames.
>
> The pipeline was run by Nigeria's state oil company and was used to
> transport gasoline across the country for national consumption.
>
> The impoverished people of Nigeria often tap pipelines, seeking fuel
> for cooking or resale on the black market. The highly volatile
> gasoline can ignite, incinerating those collecting it.
>
> In 2004 a pipeline exploded near Lagos as thieves tried to siphon
> fuel, killing as many as 50 people. A 1998 pipeline blast killed more
> than 700 in southern Nigeria.
>
> Most of Nigeria's oil is pumped in the southern Niger Delta region,
> far from Lagos. Pipes carry the crude to refineries across the nation.
>
> Nigeria, which normally pumps 2.5 million barrels of crude per day, is
> Africa's largest producer and the fifth-largest source of imports to
> the United States. It was unlikely Friday's blast would affect
> exports.
>
> The pipeline explosion slowed a drop in crude oil futures as the
> International Energy Agency sharply cut its forecasts for world oil
> demand.
>
> Nigerian militants have kidnapped foreign oil workers to press their
> demands for local control of oil revenues by inhabitants of the
> oil-producing south, who feel cheated out of the wealth produced in
> their backyards.
>
> Other groups have used kidnappings as bargaining chips to prod oil
> companies to increase jobs or improve benefits. Hostages are usually
> released unharmed.
>
> Three captive foreign oil workers in the oil hub of Port Harcourt were
> released Friday, a day after they were snatched from a bus as they
> headed to work, regional police commander Samuel Adetuyi said.
>
> It was the second attack this week on foreigners in Port Harcourt,
> where many oil companies keep their main Nigerian operations.
>
> On Wednesday, a gunman on a motorcycle shot and killed an American
> worker for the U.S. drilling equipment maker Baker Hughes Inc. The FBI
> is helping with the investigation.
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265907 ] Sa, 13 Mai 2006 18:07
CHRIS  
Obviously this is a result of Slavery.

If the traders hadn't of bought the stupid niggers captured by rival tribes,
they would have gone on to pass such wisdom as don't steal. Perhaps even
evolving to such hights of wisdom as to don't us steal gasoline by candle
light.

Good ridden to the crispy niggers.

Perhaps US inner cities can have open gas mains too?


'
"Mastic" <not [at] thisaddress> wrote in message
news:kedb62d8n72ho1m6rpgs1ftc09v6j0defs [at] 4ax.com...
>
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/N/NIGERIA_PIPELINE_BLAS T?SITE=VANOV&SEC
TION=HOME
>
> May 12, 5:24 PM EDT
>
> Nigerian pipeline blast kills up to 200
>
>
> ILADO, Nigeria (AP) -- Gasoline gushing from a ruptured pipeline
> exploded Friday as villagers scavenged for fuel, setting off an
> inferno that killed up to 200 and left charred bodies scattered around
> the site in this oil-rich country of mostly poor people.
>
> Grim-faced rescue workers swung corpses into a mass grave as dozens of
> other scorched bodies awaited collection. It appeared some victims
> tried to flee the unfolding disaster only to be overtaken by flames
> spreading across the fuel slick.
>
> The stark outlines of white skeletons lay against a beach charred
> black by fire. Other bodies floated alongside dozens of plastic
> jerrycans in the nearby waters of the coastal mangrove swamp. The
> jerrycans, which had contained pilfered gas, were twisted by the heat
> of the explosion.
>
> More than 1,000 people in Nigeria, Africa's oil giant, have died in
> recent years when fuel they were pilfering from pipelines caught fire
> - and officials said it would likely happen again.
>
> "Because this thing has happened many times before, we thought it
> would be a deterrent, but apparently it wasn't enough deterrent for
> these people who died," said Lagos State Health Commissioner Tola
> Kasali, surveying the scene near Ilado, about 30 miles east of the
> main city of Lagos.
>
> "Anywhere you have a pipeline in this country, you have this problem
> because people are greedy and they want quick money," Kasali said.
>
> It was not known what set off the fire. An FBI official in Washington
> said the bureau was working on the case but did not explain whether
> foul play was suspected. The FBI often gets involved in criminal
> investigations abroad when Americans are involved or when asked by the
> host country.
>
> Police and rescue workers said villagers were collecting the gushing
> gas when the fuel ignited, and Lagos Police Commissioner Emmanuel
> Adebayo said 150 to 200 people died. The Red Cross had said it was
> treating survivors, but no live victims were seen.
>
> A-P correspondent Edward Harris reports in Nigeria, people often
> tamper with the pipelines seeking fuel for cooking or resale on the
> black market.
>
> By day's end, about 100 of the dead had been interred, and Kasali said
> cleanup efforts would resume Saturday.
>
> He said the uncollected bodies pose a health risk to the millions of
> inhabitants of Lagos, whose skyline could be seen on the horizon.
>
> "We just decided to give them a mass burial because no one can
> recognize them - even their family members can't identify them," he
> said. "We're concerned that if we don't do that, we'll create a health
> emergency in Lagos since it happened by the shore and the water will
> just flow back into the city."
>
> The blaze took place far from the center of the fishing village of
> Ilado, and it was unclear if there were witnesses. Boatsmen said they
> heard an explosion before dawn and saw the glow of flames.
>
> The pipeline was run by Nigeria's state oil company and was used to
> transport gasoline across the country for national consumption.
>
> The impoverished people of Nigeria often tap pipelines, seeking fuel
> for cooking or resale on the black market. The highly volatile
> gasoline can ignite, incinerating those collecting it.
>
> In 2004 a pipeline exploded near Lagos as thieves tried to siphon
> fuel, killing as many as 50 people. A 1998 pipeline blast killed more
> than 700 in southern Nigeria.
>
> Most of Nigeria's oil is pumped in the southern Niger Delta region,
> far from Lagos. Pipes carry the crude to refineries across the nation.
>
> Nigeria, which normally pumps 2.5 million barrels of crude per day, is
> Africa's largest producer and the fifth-largest source of imports to
> the United States. It was unlikely Friday's blast would affect
> exports.
>
> The pipeline explosion slowed a drop in crude oil futures as the
> International Energy Agency sharply cut its forecasts for world oil
> demand.
>
> Nigerian militants have kidnapped foreign oil workers to press their
> demands for local control of oil revenues by inhabitants of the
> oil-producing south, who feel cheated out of the wealth produced in
> their backyards.
>
> Other groups have used kidnappings as bargaining chips to prod oil
> companies to increase jobs or improve benefits. Hostages are usually
> released unharmed.
>
> Three captive foreign oil workers in the oil hub of Port Harcourt were
> released Friday, a day after they were snatched from a bus as they
> headed to work, regional police commander Samuel Adetuyi said.
>
> It was the second attack this week on foreigners in Port Harcourt,
> where many oil companies keep their main Nigerian operations.
>
> On Wednesday, a gunman on a motorcycle shot and killed an American
> worker for the U.S. drilling equipment maker Baker Hughes Inc. The FBI
> is helping with the investigation.



--
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Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265928 ] Mo, 15 Mai 2006 08:42
praina246898  
"Mastic" <not [at] thisaddress> wrote in message
news:kedb62d8n72ho1m6rpgs1ftc09v6j0defs [at] 4ax.com...
|
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/N/NIGERIA_PIPELINE_BLAS T?SITE=VANOV&SECTION=HOME
|
| May 12, 5:24 PM EDT
|
| Nigerian pipeline blast kills up to 200
|
|
| ILADO, Nigeria (AP) -- Gasoline gushing from a ruptured pipeline
| exploded Friday as villagers scavenged for fuel, setting off an
| inferno that killed up to 200 and left charred bodies scattered around
| the site in this oil-rich country of mostly poor people.
|
| Grim-faced rescue workers swung corpses into a mass grave as dozens of
| other scorched bodies awaited collection. It appeared some victims
| tried to flee the unfolding disaster only to be overtaken by flames
| spreading across the fuel slick.
|
| The stark outlines of white skeletons lay against a beach charred
| black by fire. Other bodies floated alongside dozens of plastic
| jerrycans in the nearby waters of the coastal mangrove swamp. The
| jerrycans, which had contained pilfered gas, were twisted by the heat
| of the explosion.
|
| More than 1,000 people in Nigeria, Africa's oil giant, have died in
| recent years when fuel they were pilfering from pipelines caught fire
| - and officials said it would likely happen again.
|
| "Because this thing has happened many times before, we thought it
| would be a deterrent, but apparently it wasn't enough deterrent for
| these people who died," said Lagos State Health Commissioner Tola
| Kasali, surveying the scene near Ilado, about 30 miles east of the
| main city of Lagos.
|
| "Anywhere you have a pipeline in this country, you have this problem
| because people are greedy and they want quick money," Kasali said.
|
| It was not known what set off the fire. An FBI official in Washington
| said the bureau was working on the case but did not explain whether
| foul play was suspected. The FBI often gets involved in criminal
| investigations abroad when Americans are involved or when asked by the
| host country.
|
| Police and rescue workers said villagers were collecting the gushing
| gas when the fuel ignited, and Lagos Police Commissioner Emmanuel
| Adebayo said 150 to 200 people died. The Red Cross had said it was
| treating survivors, but no live victims were seen.
|
| A-P correspondent Edward Harris reports in Nigeria, people often
| tamper with the pipelines seeking fuel for cooking or resale on the
| black market.
|
| By day's end, about 100 of the dead had been interred, and Kasali said
| cleanup efforts would resume Saturday.
|
| He said the uncollected bodies pose a health risk to the millions of
| inhabitants of Lagos, whose skyline could be seen on the horizon.
|
| "We just decided to give them a mass burial because no one can
| recognize them - even their family members can't identify them," he
| said. "We're concerned that if we don't do that, we'll create a health
| emergency in Lagos since it happened by the shore and the water will
| just flow back into the city."
|
| The blaze took place far from the center of the fishing village of
| Ilado, and it was unclear if there were witnesses. Boatsmen said they
| heard an explosion before dawn and saw the glow of flames.
|
| The pipeline was run by Nigeria's state oil company and was used to
| transport gasoline across the country for national consumption.
|
| The impoverished people of Nigeria often tap pipelines, seeking fuel
| for cooking or resale on the black market. The highly volatile
| gasoline can ignite, incinerating those collecting it.
|
| In 2004 a pipeline exploded near Lagos as thieves tried to siphon
| fuel, killing as many as 50 people. A 1998 pipeline blast killed more
| than 700 in southern Nigeria.
|
| Most of Nigeria's oil is pumped in the southern Niger Delta region,
| far from Lagos. Pipes carry the crude to refineries across the nation.
|
| Nigeria, which normally pumps 2.5 million barrels of crude per day, is
| Africa's largest producer and the fifth-largest source of imports to
| the United States. It was unlikely Friday's blast would affect
| exports.
|
| The pipeline explosion slowed a drop in crude oil futures as the
| International Energy Agency sharply cut its forecasts for world oil
| demand.
|
| Nigerian militants have kidnapped foreign oil workers to press their
| demands for local control of oil revenues by inhabitants of the
| oil-producing south, who feel cheated out of the wealth produced in
| their backyards.
|
| Other groups have used kidnappings as bargaining chips to prod oil
| companies to increase jobs or improve benefits. Hostages are usually
| released unharmed.
|
| Three captive foreign oil workers in the oil hub of Port Harcourt were
| released Friday, a day after they were snatched from a bus as they
| headed to work, regional police commander Samuel Adetuyi said.
|
| It was the second attack this week on foreigners in Port Harcourt,
| where many oil companies keep their main Nigerian operations.
|
| On Wednesday, a gunman on a motorcycle shot and killed an American
| worker for the U.S. drilling equipment maker Baker Hughes Inc. The FBI
| is helping with the investigation.
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265931 ] Mo, 15 Mai 2006 12:39
Me  
Pervert! What is good about this news?

Dr.Sahib.Pandit.Shri.Shri.Rainam Ji Maharaj Ji Ustad wrote:
> "Mastic" <not [at] thisaddress> wrote ...

> | ILADO, Nigeria (AP) -- Gasoline gushing from a ruptured pipeline
> | exploded Friday as villagers scavenged for fuel, setting off an
> | inferno that killed up to 200 and left charred bodies scattered around
> | the site in this oil-rich country of mostly poor people.
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265932 ] Mo, 15 Mai 2006 14:30
praina246898  
"Mastic" <not [at] thisaddress> wrote in message
news:kedb62d8n72ho1m6rpgs1ftc09v6j0defs [at] 4ax.com...
|
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/N/NIGERIA_PIPELINE_BLAS T?SITE=VANOV&SECTION=HOME
|
| May 12, 5:24 PM EDT
|
| Nigerian pipeline blast kills up to 200
|
|
| ILADO, Nigeria (AP) -- Gasoline gushing from a ruptured pipeline
| exploded Friday as villagers scavenged for fuel, setting off an
| inferno that killed up to 200 and left charred bodies scattered around
| the site in this oil-rich country of mostly poor people.
|
| Grim-faced rescue workers swung corpses into a mass grave as dozens of
| other scorched bodies awaited collection. It appeared some victims
| tried to flee the unfolding disaster only to be overtaken by flames
| spreading across the fuel slick.
|
| The stark outlines of white skeletons lay against a beach charred
| black by fire. Other bodies floated alongside dozens of plastic
| jerrycans in the nearby waters of the coastal mangrove swamp. The
| jerrycans, which had contained pilfered gas, were twisted by the heat
| of the explosion.
|
| More than 1,000 people in Nigeria, Africa's oil giant, have died in
| recent years when fuel they were pilfering from pipelines caught fire
| - and officials said it would likely happen again.
|
| "Because this thing has happened many times before, we thought it
| would be a deterrent, but apparently it wasn't enough deterrent for
| these people who died," said Lagos State Health Commissioner Tola
| Kasali, surveying the scene near Ilado, about 30 miles east of the
| main city of Lagos.
|
| "Anywhere you have a pipeline in this country, you have this problem
| because people are greedy and they want quick money," Kasali said.
|
| It was not known what set off the fire. An FBI official in Washington
| said the bureau was working on the case but did not explain whether
| foul play was suspected. The FBI often gets involved in criminal
| investigations abroad when Americans are involved or when asked by the
| host country.
|
| Police and rescue workers said villagers were collecting the gushing
| gas when the fuel ignited, and Lagos Police Commissioner Emmanuel
| Adebayo said 150 to 200 people died. The Red Cross had said it was
| treating survivors, but no live victims were seen.
|
| A-P correspondent Edward Harris reports in Nigeria, people often
| tamper with the pipelines seeking fuel for cooking or resale on the
| black market.
|
| By day's end, about 100 of the dead had been interred, and Kasali said
| cleanup efforts would resume Saturday.
|
| He said the uncollected bodies pose a health risk to the millions of
| inhabitants of Lagos, whose skyline could be seen on the horizon.
|
| "We just decided to give them a mass burial because no one can
| recognize them - even their family members can't identify them," he
| said. "We're concerned that if we don't do that, we'll create a health
| emergency in Lagos since it happened by the shore and the water will
| just flow back into the city."
|
| The blaze took place far from the center of the fishing village of
| Ilado, and it was unclear if there were witnesses. Boatsmen said they
| heard an explosion before dawn and saw the glow of flames.
|
| The pipeline was run by Nigeria's state oil company and was used to
| transport gasoline across the country for national consumption.
|
| The impoverished people of Nigeria often tap pipelines, seeking fuel
| for cooking or resale on the black market. The highly volatile
| gasoline can ignite, incinerating those collecting it.
|
| In 2004 a pipeline exploded near Lagos as thieves tried to siphon
| fuel, killing as many as 50 people. A 1998 pipeline blast killed more
| than 700 in southern Nigeria.
|
| Most of Nigeria's oil is pumped in the southern Niger Delta region,
| far from Lagos. Pipes carry the crude to refineries across the nation.
|
| Nigeria, which normally pumps 2.5 million barrels of crude per day, is
| Africa's largest producer and the fifth-largest source of imports to
| the United States. It was unlikely Friday's blast would affect
| exports.
|
| The pipeline explosion slowed a drop in crude oil futures as the
| International Energy Agency sharply cut its forecasts for world oil
| demand.
|
| Nigerian militants have kidnapped foreign oil workers to press their
| demands for local control of oil revenues by inhabitants of the
| oil-producing south, who feel cheated out of the wealth produced in
| their backyards.
|
| Other groups have used kidnappings as bargaining chips to prod oil
| companies to increase jobs or improve benefits. Hostages are usually
| released unharmed.
|
| Three captive foreign oil workers in the oil hub of Port Harcourt were
| released Friday, a day after they were snatched from a bus as they
| headed to work, regional police commander Samuel Adetuyi said.
|
| It was the second attack this week on foreigners in Port Harcourt,
| where many oil companies keep their main Nigerian operations.
|
| On Wednesday, a gunman on a motorcycle shot and killed an American
| worker for the U.S. drilling equipment maker Baker Hughes Inc. The FBI
| is helping with the investigation.
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265936 ] Di, 16 Mai 2006 01:36
gary.wallace  
On 15-May-2006, me <noreply [at] noreply.net> wrote:

> Pervert! What is good about this news?

He is NOT a pervert.
He is just another idiot, racist cross poster. A fool, if you will.
A person who thinks "If I believe it, then it must be true" - a genuine Rush
Limbaugh fan.
Yes, you can say it... He has shit for brains.
Only someone that low would take pleasure in someone elses misery. He sinks
to the level of the muslims (dance in the street, praise the murders of
women and children).
(to all the "peaceful" muslims - It's not my real e-mail address, so don't
try to have me killed for saying that.)
(Besides, there are no cartoons in this post)
--
The Source For Premium Newsgroup Access
Great Speed, Great Retention
1 GB/Day for only $8.95
Re: Good news from Nigeria [message #265943 ] Di, 16 Mai 2006 10:06
Notifier Deamon  
Post removed (X-No-Archive: yes)
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