Tuesday, 5 March 2013

40-Year-Old Mother Who Sleeps With Her Son Is Now Pregnant For Him



This was on facebook this morning:
A mother and her son have done the unthinkable – they have fallen in love with one another. And now they want to marry since the mom, is six months pregnant and expecting her son’s first child.

Mbereko (40), who was widowed 12 years ago, has been cohabiting with her first child, Farai Mbereko (23). She confirms that she is six months pregnant and that she has decided it is better to “marry” her son because she does not want to marry her late husband’s young brothers, whom she says are coveting her.

Betty stunned a village court last week when she said the affair with her son had begun three years earlier. She said after spending a lot of money sending Farai to school following the death of her husband, she felt she had a right to his money and no other woman was entitled to it.



“Look, I strove alone to send my son to school and no one helped me. Now you see that my son is working and you accuse me of doing something wrong. “Let me enjoy the products of my sweat,” she told the village court. Farai said he was more than prepared to marry his mother and would pay off the ilobola balance his father had left unpaid to his grandparents.

“I know my father died before he finished paying the bride price and I am prepared to pay it off,” he said. “It is better to publicise what is happening because people should know that I am the one who made my mother pregnant. Otherwise they will accuse her of promiscuity.” But local headman Nathan Muputirwa says: “We cannot allow this to happen in our village, mashura chaiwo aya, (This is a bad omen indeed).

In the past they would have to be killed but today we cannot do it because we are afraid of the police.” He warned them to break off their marriage or leave his village. They chose the latter and have left the village for an unknown destination.


Monday, 4 March 2013

67 year old Australian widow found dead after meeting her date she met online


A widowed grandmother who travelled to South Africa to marry the man she loved has been found dead under suspicious circumstances in a Johannesburg guest house.

West Australian woman Jette Jacobs, 67, was found in February, two days after she met up with a Nigerian man by the name Jesse Orowo Omokoh, 28.

The pair had met on an online dating website.
Ms Jacobs had travelled to Africa to meet the Nigerian before, in a long distance relationship spanning three years and seeing the widow part with $200,000.
 



But this time they were to be married. She wanted to settle in Nigeria. Her children had begged her to stay in WA. Her body was discovered in her rented villa by South African police on February 9. Mr Omokoh, who would report to being the last person to see her alive, vanished after speaking to police.

One of Ms Jacobs' six children, who did not want to be identified, told 6PR radio in Perth on Monday her mother had been to South Africa four times, initially to meet another man. "She wasn't naive when it came to other countries, we lived in Malaysia for many years," she said.

When the woman's brother received a phone call from a South African guest house, the siblings who had warned their mother against what they believed was a scam relationship, were in disbelief. "I thought it was a hoax and I wouldn't believe that my mother had actually passed so I rang the consulate," the woman said.

"A couple of hours later they called me back and gave me their apologies." A joint operation between WA Police and Consumer Protection, codenamed Project Sunbird, had sent Ms Jacobs a letter warning that she may be the victim of fraud, but it was too late.

By the time the letter arrived in Ms Jacobs' mailbox she had already left for her ill-fated trip. When her children met with detectives in South Africa, they discovered her money, jewellery, laptop and credit cards were all missing. And then there was an empty pill bottle found near her. "Anybody who knew my mother would know that there is no way that she would do that," her daughter told 6PR.

 "This has gone on for four years and after four years there is a very strong element of trust that has been built." One of Ms Jacobs' sons warned others not to head overseas to meet people they've met online. "It could be a one-way ticket," he said. Major fraud squad detective Dom Blackshaw said WA Police were now involved in the investigation and treating the death as "suspicious".

 "These relationship frauds are being perpetrated by ruthless overseas criminals who are members of organised crime syndicates," he said. "To travel to Africa to visit someone you have met on the internet is extremely dangerous and could, as in the case of Ms Jacobs, cost your life.


Nigerian Gay church


The general Overseer of Nigerian gay church speaks out say Holy Spirit led him to start the church.Its primary vision is to reach out to sexual minorities in Nigeria, UK, and around the world.
Rev Rowland Jide Macaulay is a confirmed and ordained Pastor who founded the House Of Rainbow Church in 2006. He openly held Sunday services in a Lagos hotel hall decked out with rainbow flags until the public revolted against the church.
He then fled to the UK after death threats.
Here is his view on homo-sexuality and his reason for the existence of the church


"For me I have always been gay and I never became gay. I became aware of my same sex attraction whilst living in Nigeria at the age of seven. Boys flirt with each other unknowing all the time and it was at this stage that I was more aware of my emotional, physical, mental and sexual attraction to boys. I was 14 when I had my first sex with a guy, it was filled with curiousity, passion, embarassment and guilt as with with any heterosexual having sex for the first time.

 By this age I had become a youth leader in the church and had spent time reading the bible including discovering chapters that "condemned" homosexuality. Imagine the furore of my life? Now I have to be discrete, secretive and live a lie.

When I look back at my life it never stopped my same sex attractions. Fast forward thirty years, I am now fully confident that being gay is my natural being and I regretted ever trying to be straight. I regretted that I did not get the education and appropriate spiritual development to be a gay man. I can understand that and that is why I am determined that the short life I may live in this world I trust God for the development of inclusive Christian education to enable the freedom of the mind, body, soul and spirit. Recently, my father asked me to prove that homosexuality is genetics.

I just looked at him and pointed to myself, "ME" you made me, you gave birth to a homosexual boy he was anxious to know more, so I asked him to prove to me that God is real, not that I don't know but if we were to play "doubting Thomas", lets lay all the cards out. My homosexuality is real, I am gay and I did not become gay, just like I am black and I did not become black.

This is a great way to move forward in life and let the world know that they may hate us but God Adores Us. House of Rainbow Fellowship is an inclusive Christian community, that welcomes all people and does not discriminate against LGBTI people (of faith or no faith). I am proud that the Holy Spirit has led me to start this group, (nearly five years).

We are growing with passion and relevance and it is my hope that we would be able to advance the learning and inclusion of all people. I love myself and it is my daily prayer and hope that millions of LGBTI people around the world, their friends and families will come to understand and love them."


N100billion which FG owes Marketers might lead to fuel scarcity again


The nation may be thrown into another round of fuel scarcity as a result of mounting debts being owed oil marketers by the Federal Government. 
Investigations by our correspondent on Sunday revealed that over N100bn was being owed independent oil marketers for petroleum products imported into the country between the last quarter of 2012 and February this year.

The development was confirmed by a senior official of one of the oil marketers’ associations during a telephone interview with our correspondent.

The official pleaded not to be named as his firm was one of the companies being owed subsidy claims by the Federal Government.


He said the N100bn debt arose from claims owed about 43 independent oil marketing firms. He added that the debt could rise to about N200bn if subsidy claims by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation was considered. The official pointed out that the development, if not addressed urgently, might result into another round of fuel scarcity in the country.

 He said, “The Federal Government still owes us money for fuel subsidy. As I speak to you, the other payment that we are being owed is over N100bn and this amount covers the last quarter of 2012 till now. “There are about 42 or 43 oil marketers that have oil depots and these are the numbers being owed. “We borrow money from banks to import fuel into this country and they continue to owe us billion of naira. “The more they delay in paying us our claims, the higher the interest rates from the banks.” He said apart from the bulk payment that was made from the N161bn fuel subsidy supplementary budget of 2012, no other payment had been made. The Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, had shortly after the passage of the bill in December by the National Assembly said that a total of N94bn for 23 oil marketers had been paid.

The minister had on January 8, 2013 said while 23 marketers had been paid; the claims of 27 others were being processed. She had said, “As of now (January 8), 23 marketers have done their paper work so they may still have outstanding claims because we do them in batches through the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency and the Debt Management Office. “Some of them who have cleared may also come back because I have a list of 27 marketers for the remainder of the money, but some of them have already featured under this 23 and they may have to come back.” When reminded about the payment made by the Federal Government in January, the source said the money was used to settle outstanding marketers’ claims that arose from the Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede committee’s report. “In the wake of the Imokhuede report, there were some payments that were suspended.

When the figures were reconciled, that supplementary budget was used to pay those claims. There is no news yet on subsidy payment between last quarter and now,” he said. The official also said the delay by President Goodluck Jonathan to assent the 2013 budget, which had a provision of N971bn for fuel subsidy, might have caused the non- payment.


Dabota-Ex Miss Nigeria UK spends $30,000 on cosmetic surgery

       Before the surgery                         After the surgery