Thursday, 23 January 2014

Barack Obama, Michelle Obama Divorce Rumors: Everything You Want And Need To Know.




Rumors of a divorce between Barack and Michelle Obama have set the Internet abuzz. Here’s everything you want to know about the new Obama divorce rumors which have suddenly become the hottest news on the internet. The information below is based on Jan. 19 news reports from Inquisitr.com, The Nation, The Daily Star and other media outlets reporting on the alleged Obama marital strife as viewed by The Examiner.


Here are the key points associated with the latest Obama divorce rumors, including two alleged cheating episodes by Barack Obama and the brazen flirting which angered Michelle Obama to the point that she reportedly wants a divorce.

Divorce Already in the Works

Michelle Obama has already secretly met with an attorney to work out the logistics of filing for a divorce in which she will pursue a divorce settlement in which will include half of Barack Obama’s assets.

When Barack Obama’s presidency is over, he will reportedly move back to Hawaii where he grew up. Michelle Obama and the couple’s two teenage daughters, Sasha and Malia, will remain in Washington D.C. This is not the first time the Obama’s have been the subject of divorce rumors. However, this time the divorce rumors have a slightly different twist.

Secret Service Covers Up Obama’s Cheating

During the Obama’s Christmas break in Hawaii, someone is said to have leaked information to Michelle Obama about the Secret Service covering up Barack Obama’s alleged extramarital affairs.

In one incident, Barack was reportedly caught with a woman in an incident that was quickly hushed up by the Secret Service.

In a separate incident, a Secret Service agent was said to have seen Barack Obama in a compromising position with another woman while Michelle Obama was out of town. These new allegations of infidelity have revived interest in previous reports of Michelle Obama’s jealousy and the infamous rumor of the Barack Obama-Vera Baker affair.

Barack Obama Selfies Embarrass Michelle Obama

Prior to finding out about Barack Obama’s alleged infidelities, Michelle Obama was allegedly already angry that Barack Obama embarrassed her by taking selfies at Nelson Mandela’s funeral with the beautiful blonde the prime minister of Denmark, Helle Thorning-Schmidt while Michelle gave them an icy stare. The first lady later changed seats, putting herself between Barack Obama and the attractive blonde. The whole incident was caught by photographers and pictured of the incident went viral on the Net.

Obamas Fight in Hawaii During Christmas Break

According to the rumors, the Obamas fought about the incident during their Christmas break in Hawaii and things came to a head when she found out about the Secret Service covering up Barack’s extramarital affairs.

This was reportedly the real reason Michelle Obama refused to return to Washington with Barack and the couple’s daughters. They flew back without Michelle, who remained behind and spent more than a week at Oprah Winfrey’s Hawaiian estate with friends.

The official story that Michelle’s extended stay in Hawaii was a birthday present from Barack Obama. The White House press secretary commented “If you have kids, you know that telling your spouse that they can go spend a week away from home is actually a big present

Separate Bedrooms, Separate Lives

Anonymous White House sources claim that the first couple have already separated. For the sake of outward appearances, Michelle Obama will reportedly continue living at the White House until Barack Obama’s current term of office ends, but she will lead a separate life. The first lady has reportedly already moved out of the presidential bedroom and into another bedroom in the family’s private living quarters. Other sources report that Michelle Obama has already made arrangements to remove Barack Obama’s belongings from of their Chicago home.

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Photos: Toke Makinwa Shares Wedding Pictures! Says She Had No Clue She Will Be Getting Married



Beautiful pictures. Here is what the new Mrs said;


On the 15th of January 2014, I got married to my lover and Best Friend. It was such an intimate event, I haven't stopped apologising to family and friends who feel slighted that they could not attend. I really did not wish to keep it a secret, If anything we would have loved to have all our loved ones there with us but this was our registry and so much had happened between Maje and I in the last 3 months. Plus, it was such a huge surprise, I had no clue. I hate surprises but I must say, this one knocked me out of my elements because i usually suspect something is happening. Hehehehe! I am not fully over it yet. Continue after the cut...



Relationships are tough, people go through the ups and downs and we as a couple have had our share of that. Having a private moment was not to offend anyone, it was God's appointed time and No, I am not pregnant. Lol. Having a baby is a precious gift from God and when that time is right, I am sure he will bless us with ours. Without boring you all, cos you mean so much to me, I have decided to share some of the pictures from the happiest day of my life.

























I Won’t Be Dropping An Album This Year- Davido





Davido has told his fans not to expect much from him this year. Even though the singer will still be singing and going on few tours, he says he will be focusing more on other HKN members. ‘No be only me go blow! We all must chop’ he said. Good luck to him.


Friday, 17 January 2014

Nigeria’s Retrogressive Anti-Gay Law


This past Wednesday, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan elevated crassness and primitiveness to the highest level imaginable by signing into law a bill banning homosexuality in Nigeria. I deliberately crafted the previous sentence so unambiguously. He did not just ban homosexual marriage; he banned homosexuality as a whole! Perhaps if the law had only stopped at "persons who enter into a same-sex marriage contract or civil union commit an offence and are each liable on conviction to a term of 14 years in prison," one might not feel so much outrage. But it went on to state that "any person who registers, operates or participates in gay clubs, societies and organizations or directly or indirectly makes public show of same-sex amorous relationship in Nigeria commits an offence and shall each be liable on conviction to a term of 10 years in prison"! In essence, only heterosexuals are allowed to hold hands in public, sit on each other’s lap, hump each other while dancing in clubs or kiss publicly. What, in the name of God, just happened to Nigeria?

Let me state upfront that I am a Straight (heterosexual) guy who is happily married to a beautiful woman. So, this write-up is not about me or my sexual preference. It is about Nigeria’s lack of originality and lack of creative instincts. We the people, along with our leaders, fail to do the deep thinking, the due diligence, in many respects that will take our country farther and more quickly than we have hitherto done. Lethargy is irredeemably ingrained in our psyche. Otherwise, how does being openly gay draw our country back? We already have thousands of gay people in our midst! How does their gayness prevent those of us who are not gay from going about our businesses?

This law assumes that the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community just arrived in Nigeria yesterday. No, the LGBT has been with us since, at least, when I was a young boy over 50 years ago. I recall growing up in (yes) Zaria, Kaduna State, of all places, and going to watch evening dances of members of the LGBT. We used to call them “Dandaudu.” We, the kids, used to marvel at their public display of amorous acts. This was in the early 60s. They were not hidden behind the walls of any clubs in the middle of the night; they danced in open spaces and in early evenings. I have also personally witnessed “Dandaudus” doing their dances in Bukuru, Jos, Bauchi and Maiduguri in the 70s. And if you lived in the hostel during your secondary school years, don’t tell me that you did not catch a few of your guy friends “doing it.” I have heard from some of my secondary school female friends of the sexual trysts that went on in their hostel. Let’s not even talk about what happens in the dorms of our universities. So, why are we just now finding out that their presence in our midst is anathema and antithetical to our moral fiber?

Reuben Abati, that formerly celebrated anti-bad government champion, who is now a turncoat and who I now detest with so much passion, defended the law with the pedestrian argument that since 90 percent of Nigerians were opposed to same-sex marriage, “...the law is in line with our cultural and religious beliefs.” Ninety percent? First, how did we come up with that percentage? When did we poll the country to ascertain that 90 percent of our people oppose same-sex marriage? And even if they do, what right does the majority have to trample on the basic right of the minority – the fundamental human right to freedom of association? What right does the majority have to deprive the minority of having sex with whomever it wants as long as it is consensual? The worst that the Nigerian government should have been able to do should have been the denial of official recognition of such a union. But to criminalize it is akin to despotism, especially in a democratic dispensation.

And by the way, since when has this government or any past Nigerian government taken a decision in favor of an issue perceived to have received the support of the majority of Nigerians? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the removal or Stella Oduah as Aviation minister, Diezani Madueke as Petroleum minister and Reuben Abati as adviser? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the banning of government officials, especially the President, from seeking medical attention abroad until our medical facilities and personnel are of the same standard as those they use when they go abroad? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the supply of 24/7 uninterrupted electricity to all corners of Nigeria? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the revamping, rejuvenating and reinvigorating of the EFCC so it can better fight corruption? Don’t 90 percent of our people support a massive overhaul of our educational infrastructures from elementary all the way to university systems? Don’t 90 percent of our people oppose the blocking of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway by mega-churches and mega-mosques? Have our lawmakers crafted any laws that criminalize the failure by government to do the things mentioned above? No. But these nosey people are eager to get into the bedrooms of Nigerians.

I find this homophobic inclination that is so rampant in our country as yet another example of religious zealotry and self-righteousness that have been the bane of our society. Everybody is stampeding and trampling each other today in their quest to out-do one another as they condemn homosexuality. But we will find out one day - tomorrow maybe - just as we have found out in Europe and America that even family members of influential government officials can be (and are indeed) gay! In fact, we will soon find out that membership in the LGBT community cuts across all spectra of our society – from the ranks of elected politicians, to traditional rulers, military officers, police officers, teachers, technocrats, pastors, imams, babalawos, traders and what not. And what are we going to do when we find out that one of these influential people whom we had thought was heterosexual was indeed bisexual? Would we throw OBJ or IBB or GEJ or Mama Iyabo or Dame Patience or any of their children into 14 years of prison terms if any of them turns out to be gay? What would we do when we discover that Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye or his wife, Folu do engage in homosexual acts (with other partners, of course)? What about Sheik Muhammad Yahaya Sanni and his many wives? Are we going to give them immunity against prosecution?

This is why I stated earlier that our leaders did not subject this law to a rigorous and intellectual discuss before allowing their emotion, religion and communal bandwagon mentality to overtake their sense of reason. Before the bill was adopted by the Senate in 2011, a few Nigerian members of the LGBT community, supported by some civil rights activists, appeared before the Senate to argue against enacting such a law. The lawmakers and religious zealots in the chambers of the Senate booed and heckled these gay folks till they cried and left in disgrace. Among the booing and heckling crowd were men who maintain two, three, four or more wives – wives who are subjugated, mentally and are physically abused. Among this crowd were women who cheat on their husbands with their pastors and imams to the extent of making babies out-of-wedlock while their husbands thought the babies were theirs. These people, in my opinion, lack the moral right to tell a gay man or woman whom to love and whom to cavort with in public.

Believe me, gays are the least of Nigeria’s problems. Graft in high places, greed in high places, hired assassination, kidnapping, murder, armed robbery, neglect of rural areas, neglect of urban areas, lack of functioning basic amenities like electricity, water, hospitals, education, transportation, youth unemployment – all take precedence over what my neighbor is doing in his/her bedroom. I am ashamed that my leaders do not see this.

And I get it. I get the fact that Nigeria is a deeply religious country. Even if I wonder how truly religious we are when we watch our religious leaders steal from the religious houses and sexually abuse the laity; even if I sometimes wonder why our religious leaders live in obscene opulence while they watch their followers wallow in abject poverty, I still get the fact that Nigeria is a deeply religious country. It is the reason why an issue such as gay rights should have been thoroughly debated intellectually. I hope the passing of this primitive and retrogressive law begins the rigorous discussion of how we allow members of the LGBT to bask in their rightful sense of belonging. We should lead Namibia, Botswana, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, Angola, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan, South Sudan, Cameroon, Togo, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leon, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia out of the comity of nations still wedded to the archaic tradition of segregating their own people on the basis of sexual preferences.

We should join South Africa, Zaire, Congo, Gabon, Central African Republic, Chad, Niger, Mali (yes, Chad, Niger and Mali), Burkina Faso, Benin Republic, Cote D’Ivoire and Guinea Bissau in the comity of nations that embrace the diversity of their people’s sexual preferences and have legislated to protect the rights of their LGBT people

Nigeria’s Retrogressive Anti-Gay Law


This past Wednesday, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan elevated crassness and primitiveness to the highest level imaginable by signing into law a bill banning homosexuality in Nigeria. I deliberately crafted the previous sentence so unambiguously. He did not just ban homosexual marriage; he banned homosexuality as a whole! Perhaps if the law had only stopped at "persons who enter into a same-sex marriage contract or civil union commit an offence and are each liable on conviction to a term of 14 years in prison," one might not feel so much outrage. But it went on to state that "any person who registers, operates or participates in gay clubs, societies and organizations or directly or indirectly makes public show of same-sex amorous relationship in Nigeria commits an offence and shall each be liable on conviction to a term of 10 years in prison"! In essence, only heterosexuals are allowed to hold hands in public, sit on each other’s lap, hump each other while dancing in clubs or kiss publicly. What, in the name of God, just happened to Nigeria?

Let me state upfront that I am a Straight (heterosexual) guy who is happily married to a beautiful woman. So, this write-up is not about me or my sexual preference. It is about Nigeria’s lack of originality and lack of creative instincts. We the people, along with our leaders, fail to do the deep thinking, the due diligence, in many respects that will take our country farther and more quickly than we have hitherto done. Lethargy is irredeemably ingrained in our psyche. Otherwise, how does being openly gay draw our country back? We already have thousands of gay people in our midst! How does their gayness prevent those of us who are not gay from going about our businesses?

This law assumes that the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community just arrived in Nigeria yesterday. No, the LGBT has been with us since, at least, when I was a young boy over 50 years ago. I recall growing up in (yes) Zaria, Kaduna State, of all places, and going to watch evening dances of members of the LGBT. We used to call them “Dandaudu.” We, the kids, used to marvel at their public display of amorous acts. This was in the early 60s. They were not hidden behind the walls of any clubs in the middle of the night; they danced in open spaces and in early evenings. I have also personally witnessed “Dandaudus” doing their dances in Bukuru, Jos, Bauchi and Maiduguri in the 70s. And if you lived in the hostel during your secondary school years, don’t tell me that you did not catch a few of your guy friends “doing it.” I have heard from some of my secondary school female friends of the sexual trysts that went on in their hostel. Let’s not even talk about what happens in the dorms of our universities. So, why are we just now finding out that their presence in our midst is anathema and antithetical to our moral fiber?

Reuben Abati, that formerly celebrated anti-bad government champion, who is now a turncoat and who I now detest with so much passion, defended the law with the pedestrian argument that since 90 percent of Nigerians were opposed to same-sex marriage, “...the law is in line with our cultural and religious beliefs.” Ninety percent? First, how did we come up with that percentage? When did we poll the country to ascertain that 90 percent of our people oppose same-sex marriage? And even if they do, what right does the majority have to trample on the basic right of the minority – the fundamental human right to freedom of association? What right does the majority have to deprive the minority of having sex with whomever it wants as long as it is consensual? The worst that the Nigerian government should have been able to do should have been the denial of official recognition of such a union. But to criminalize it is akin to despotism, especially in a democratic dispensation.

And by the way, since when has this government or any past Nigerian government taken a decision in favor of an issue perceived to have received the support of the majority of Nigerians? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the removal or Stella Oduah as Aviation minister, Diezani Madueke as Petroleum minister and Reuben Abati as adviser? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the banning of government officials, especially the President, from seeking medical attention abroad until our medical facilities and personnel are of the same standard as those they use when they go abroad? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the supply of 24/7 uninterrupted electricity to all corners of Nigeria? Don’t 90 percent of our people support the revamping, rejuvenating and reinvigorating of the EFCC so it can better fight corruption? Don’t 90 percent of our people support a massive overhaul of our educational infrastructures from elementary all the way to university systems? Don’t 90 percent of our people oppose the blocking of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway by mega-churches and mega-mosques? Have our lawmakers crafted any laws that criminalize the failure by government to do the things mentioned above? No. But these nosey people are eager to get into the bedrooms of Nigerians.

I find this homophobic inclination that is so rampant in our country as yet another example of religious zealotry and self-righteousness that have been the bane of our society. Everybody is stampeding and trampling each other today in their quest to out-do one another as they condemn homosexuality. But we will find out one day - tomorrow maybe - just as we have found out in Europe and America that even family members of influential government officials can be (and are indeed) gay! In fact, we will soon find out that membership in the LGBT community cuts across all spectra of our society – from the ranks of elected politicians, to traditional rulers, military officers, police officers, teachers, technocrats, pastors, imams, babalawos, traders and what not. And what are we going to do when we find out that one of these influential people whom we had thought was heterosexual was indeed bisexual? Would we throw OBJ or IBB or GEJ or Mama Iyabo or Dame Patience or any of their children into 14 years of prison terms if any of them turns out to be gay? What would we do when we discover that Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye or his wife, Folu do engage in homosexual acts (with other partners, of course)? What about Sheik Muhammad Yahaya Sanni and his many wives? Are we going to give them immunity against prosecution?

This is why I stated earlier that our leaders did not subject this law to a rigorous and intellectual discuss before allowing their emotion, religion and communal bandwagon mentality to overtake their sense of reason. Before the bill was adopted by the Senate in 2011, a few Nigerian members of the LGBT community, supported by some civil rights activists, appeared before the Senate to argue against enacting such a law. The lawmakers and religious zealots in the chambers of the Senate booed and heckled these gay folks till they cried and left in disgrace. Among the booing and heckling crowd were men who maintain two, three, four or more wives – wives who are subjugated, mentally and are physically abused. Among this crowd were women who cheat on their husbands with their pastors and imams to the extent of making babies out-of-wedlock while their husbands thought the babies were theirs. These people, in my opinion, lack the moral right to tell a gay man or woman whom to love and whom to cavort with in public.

Believe me, gays are the least of Nigeria’s problems. Graft in high places, greed in high places, hired assassination, kidnapping, murder, armed robbery, neglect of rural areas, neglect of urban areas, lack of functioning basic amenities like electricity, water, hospitals, education, transportation, youth unemployment – all take precedence over what my neighbor is doing in his/her bedroom. I am ashamed that my leaders do not see this.

And I get it. I get the fact that Nigeria is a deeply religious country. Even if I wonder how truly religious we are when we watch our religious leaders steal from the religious houses and sexually abuse the laity; even if I sometimes wonder why our religious leaders live in obscene opulence while they watch their followers wallow in abject poverty, I still get the fact that Nigeria is a deeply religious country. It is the reason why an issue such as gay rights should have been thoroughly debated intellectually. I hope the passing of this primitive and retrogressive law begins the rigorous discussion of how we allow members of the LGBT to bask in their rightful sense of belonging. We should lead Namibia, Botswana, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, Angola, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan, South Sudan, Cameroon, Togo, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leon, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia out of the comity of nations still wedded to the archaic tradition of segregating their own people on the basis of sexual preferences.

We should join South Africa, Zaire, Congo, Gabon, Central African Republic, Chad, Niger, Mali (yes, Chad, Niger and Mali), Burkina Faso, Benin Republic, Cote D’Ivoire and Guinea Bissau in the comity of nations that embrace the diversity of their people’s sexual preferences and have legislated to protect the rights of their LGBT people

Dr Mike Murdock Gives COZA Pastor, Biodun Fatoyinbo A Rolls Royce








Aww the man of God was in Nigeria on the 13th of January, which was the last day of COZA’s ‘12 Days of Glory’, and presented the Pastor a Rolls Royce gift. Below is how a COZA member explained it on his blog. Pastor Fatoyinbo became more popular after a young vibrant lady, Ese accused him of having sex with her.


This was the 12th and last day of “12 Days of Glory”. An annual conference heavenly inspired and organised by the Commonwealth Of Zion Assembly- COZA. Starting from the 2nd through 13th of January. Attended were World-class Ministers of the Gospel; Bishop Thomas A. Bishop Felix Adejumo, Bishop Noel Jones, Michelle M. Hammond, Pastor Mathew Ashimolowo, Dr. Mike Murdock and others who preached with well Seasoned Words of Grace. It was a Life transforming moment. Continue below...

Dr. Mike Murdock crowning up the meeting did the Exceptional of what happens to be a Most Memorable day for COZA and will hit the Air-ways soon.


He was in fact eager to do it as he couldn’t wait, till after the message. I am filled with amazement and gratitude. This 68 year old Wealthy Prominent and Adept Preacher released a Million-dollar Gift to the Senior Pastor of COZA.


According to him, he had initially asked pastor Biodun in secret if he wanted it but since he did not accept it, he decided to come on publicly to offer it to the Pastor’s wife, which she gladly accepted. The Gift of a Rolls-Royce threw the Church into Shouts of Celebration and moved the Pastor and his wife to tears.


Now when a Guest speaker decides to honour the Host in such a manner, it is worth the Wonder and amazement. As the reverse should have been the case. As we speak the Car is on its way to Nigeria and Grace my Pastor’s Car Park. Wow!


Now here is the most emotional moment for me. Dr. Mike made a Life-long commitment to the Pastor’s Kids. Four of them in number. I just couldn’t hold my tears anymore as he knelt down on this hard floor for what took about 20 minutes to verbally commit; including them in his Will and to be a second Father to them for as Long as he Lives.



Wow! It was Church unusual. Afterwards he led the Church to Bless the Pastor. This surely is a “net-breaking and boat-sinking” testimony. Driving home I was marveled, I still shout at intervals. This must be an act of God’s Favor. I Celebrate my Pastor. This is a great way to start the year. I am Happy!!

Wednesday, 15 January 2014

Twitter War of Words: Kola Boof, Dencia Exchange Blows (PHOTOS)





Egyptian/Sudanese-American novelist and writer Kola Boof, who claimed to have been Osama Bin Laden’s sex slave, and the Cameroonian-Nigerian musician Dencia are in Twitter war of words.

It all began when Kola assumed Dencia of was bleaching her skin to be ‘White…like Jesus’. Check out what she wrote below:



The musician replied, recommended the writer to hold her ‘Saggy Ass titties’.



The second round of the twitter fight started shortly.



It was Kola Boof’s time to reply. She referred to Dencia as ‘trash’. See more tweets below:



To be continued…

Rivers Shooting: Citizens Don’t Need Police Permit To Hold Rallies – Gbajabiamila







The Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, on Wednesday questioned the powers of the Rivers State Police Command to use tear-gas on citizens holding rallies.


The lawmaker claimed that the command abused citizens’ rights and acted in flagrant disobedience of a Supreme Court judgment, which declared that police permits are not necessary before a rally can take place.

Gbajabiamila was reacting to last Sunday’s alleged shooting of Senator Magnus Abe by the police with rubber bullets.

The alleged shooting, which occurred during a Save Rivers Movement rally in Obio-Akpor local government area of Rivers State, left Abe and several other persons wounded.

The police also used tear-gas to disperse those participating in the rally.

“The Supreme Court years ago ruled that Police permit is not required for a rally.

“So, all this talk from the Rivers state commissioner of police about permit is balderdash”, Gbajabiamila noted in a statement in Abuja.

He also argued that tear-gas was a “chemical weapon” because of the “gas” it contained.

According to the lawmaker, the police should face similar charge as any person or body that used chemical weapons on citizens.

The statement read further, “The House Minority Leader wants the public to note that tear gas is a chemical hence the word gas.

“He further derided the police for use of chemical weapon on citizens.

“The use of chemical weapons against once own citizens (or anyone for that matter) is unacceptable and that is why the world is up in arms against Syria.

“The Minority Leader is calling the attention of the international community to this abuse of citizen’s rights.

“Reprisals and public order also have internationally acceptable standards.

“The world needs to pay attention to this inhumane treatment of innocent citizens”, Gbajabiamila said.