Daily Trust

Re: I remember ‘occupy Nigeria’

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under-reported, concentrat­ion was full in the North. There are some peculiar situations of soil erosion, which affected some crops, and increases in the prices of food items. And most of the farmers are worried and do not even know what to do. But I stand to be corrected. Mentioning only some certain crops in the agricultur­al sectors, whereas the floods also affected some of the livestock production­s, apiculture, horticultu­re, destructio­n of economy trees, orchard, displaceme­nt of the farmers, affecting the farmsteads of the farmers and this in returns will lead to the economic hardship, a sociology pains of the practising farmers and to add to this various situation, reduces the rate of farming and land cultivatio­ns.

Michael Adedotun Oke, 080271420** corruption like today. What we read every day from different sectors ,a dog cannot eat it.

Com. Bishir Dauda Sabuwar Unguwa Katsina 081652709**

Much as the government may be wrong for increasing the price of petrol, electricit­y, it is very wrong to call for mass action, protest, or resistance. I said the govt may be wrong because even during the GEJ administra­tion, many scholars, intellectu­als and prominent personalit­ies actually supported total subsidy removal, deregulati­on of downstream as way forward and even Atiku Abubakar of PDP has vowed to privatise our refineries as a panacea if he wins power. Mass actions have not helped in Iraq, Egypt, Syria, Libya to desire for worse, anarchy, or more suffering against pains.

Mohammed Bagudu, Minna 081048437**

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