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simiolu1:I know there is a 3 side to a every story, but my gut is telling me dele is at fault here. How can u ignore ur mother even if she is a drunk?. Dele should make peace with his family, there is nothing like family |
meeky007:Told u utd will win . Glory Glory utd |
seun, lalastica come see una prince dey misbehave oh. |
cummando:You said it all |
babagydoz:na small boy na. money and fame dey catch d guy |
zico530:Yes oh |
meeky007:hahahahahahaha
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meeky007:Watch as utd lift their 1st trophy this season |
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The heartbroken parents of England footballer Dele Alli today reveal their despair at having no part in the superstar’s life. In an extraordinary interview, Dele’s mum Denise repeatedly breaks down as she tells how she now cries herself to sleep at night over the ordeal. And his father Kehinde, a multi-millionaire businessman, tells how the only thing missing in his life is his first-born son. Despite splitting when Dele was a child, his parents came together this week and spoke out in a desperate bid to repair their relationship with the £60,000-a-week Spurs midfielder. As they opened up family albums to reveal happy photos of Dele’s childhood Kehinde, 47, told the Sunday Mirror: “I just do not understand what we have done wrong. He refuses to speak to me and it feels like he’s been taken from us. But I won’t give up on getting him back.” Dele’s mum Denise, 53, added: “I’m a very miserable person because I get so sad that Dele is missing out on his family and we’re missing out on him. “I want to be able to hug him and let him know we all love him to bits. “I’m not interested in his money, I’d love him the same if he worked in McDonald’s. We just want our son back.” Dele, 20, is considered English football’s biggest rising star. He won the prestigious PFA Young Player of the Year award at the end of last season and is now being linked with a mega-money move to Spanish giants Real Madrid. But while his career has rocketed since leaving home-town club Milton Keynes Dons, his relationship with his parents has completely broken down. Neither has been able to see him since he signed for Tottenham in February 2015 – an estrangement which has not only broken their hearts but left them bewildered. Recalling him leaving, Denise said: “He was in great spirits and said, ‘I love you mum’. I had no idea that would be the last time I would see him. It still leaves me shocked.” Last August it emerged Dele would no longer wear Alli on the back of his shirt, as he said he felt “no connection” to the name. The young star – red-carded against Belgian side Gent in a Europa League tie on February 23 – has also changed his mobile number and moved home. Both Kehinde and Denise have made a series of desperate attempts to see Dele at Tottenham games, at the training ground and even by joining stadium tours. Dele was born in Milton Keynes, Bucks, in April 1996 just over a year after his parents first met in a nightclub. At the time Kehinde, originally from Nigeria, was studying for a Masters at De Montfort University. He and Denise, then a full-time mum of two, married after a whirlwind romance. They broke up three years after Dele was born. In 2000 Kehinde moved to Canada for work, returning to the UK regularly. Despite the distance the couple stayed close, with Kehinde supporting Denise and all her children. When Dele was eight, Kehinde moved back to his home city of Lagos. The youngster – a prince of Nigeria’s Yoruba tribe through birth – soon moved there to join him. They lived in a 10-room mansion where Dele led a life of luxury, being waited on by three maids and attending a private £20,000-a-year international school. Dele later moved with Kehinde to another mansion in Houston, Texas, and was best man at his dad’s wedding to Lola in 2006. He returned to England aged 11 after his talent for football and obsession with the game became clear. Kehinde says: “It was hard for me to let him go but I knew it was the best thing for him and his ambition.” After returning to Milton Keynes to live with Denise, Dele began playing for junior side City Colts. He was quickly spotted by youth scouts from the town’s Football League club MK Dons. Denise said: “When he was about 13 Dele began training at MK Dons five days a week. So for convenience he began staying at his best friend’s house during the week, before coming home at weekends. It was hard to let him live away from home, but we didn’t have a car and I was finding it hard to get him to training myself. “It has been said that I was suffering from alcoholism and I gave him up because I couldn’t look after him, but that is a lie. I wanted to give him the best chance of achieving his dream, but he was still my son and I was there for him whenever he needed me. “He was never adopted by his friend’s parents – I would not have allowed it. My kids are my world.” Dele’s parents were saddened that they missed out on seeing him sign his first professional contract for MK Dons, aged 16, as they were not invited or told it was happening. And as time went on he gradually began to withdraw from his family. He stopped answering phone calls, came home less, missed family events and finally cut contact completely. Our exclusive picture of Dele with his mum shows them together the last time he spoke to her, two years ago. In despair, Denise went to try to talk to him outside Tottenham’s White Hart Lane stadium after a match there last year. But instead of stopping to speak to her he simply walked to his car. Wiping away copious tears, Denise recalls: “I didn’t have a ticket for the game but I went to the ground because I wanted to try and see Dele. “I waited outside after the match and when Dele came out I quietly said to him. ‘Dele... it’s me... your mum’. “He didn’t stop. He just looked at me, said he was busy and drove off. I was in tears, it was heartbreaking. “Some fans who had overheard asked if I was really his mum and why he was treating me like that. I told them, ‘I just don’t know’.” “When I got home I had a call from a man who said he represented Dele. He accused me of shouting to Dele, which I didn’t, and said if I tried to do it again I’d be banned from the ground for life. It was horrible.” Kehinde, an oil, gas, and technology entrepreneur, thinks his son is being manipulated by others for financial gain. He has repeatedly made the 5,000-mile journey to London from his home in Houston, trying to reunite the family. He has bought tickets for a string of Spurs games home and away just so he can see Dele in the flesh and support him, including at the club’s 1-0 win over Middlesbrough earlier this month. He has also spent a full day standing outside Tottenham’s training ground and even paid to go on a tour of White Hart Lane in the hope he would see Dele. Kehinde says: “Not being able to see or speak to him hurts a lot. Myself and his brothers watch all his games on TV and they ask me, ‘Why won’t he see us?’ “Dele has apparently told his sister I was never there for him growing up, but I can’t understand that. He lived with me for years and I have always been there for him both emotionally and financially. “Up until he was an adult I paid for every holiday he ever went on and all his costs. I bought him his first car when he passed his driving test. Now he is turning his back on the family who love him.” Kehinde adds: “I know some people will think we just want him for his money, but it couldn’t be further from the truth. I’m very wealthy in my own right and I don’t need a penny from Dele. “I just want to be here for him and for him to know that I love him.” Denise, who still cuddles Dele’s childhood Chelsea FC bedspread to feel close to him, says: “Every night I say a prayer asking for God to bring him back to us. I dream about him coming home.” Dele Alli said he had no comment to make on his parents’ claims. http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/dele-allis-estranged-parents-issue-9918748?ICID=FB_mirror_main
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Madeu:Agree completely with you |
Afonjashapmouth:South Africa have the highest crime rate in d world |
joystickextend1:EXACTLY |
I know we Nigerians don't like ourselves and am not holding brief for anyone. One question I want ask is if this British couple are selling drugs or into prostitution to deserve this brutality? |
A British woman has been murdered and her husband left for dead after a group broke into their South African home, beat them up and repeatedly burned them with a blowtorch. Sue Howarth, 64, and husband Robert Lynn, 66, were asleep in bed on their farm in South Africa when three black males broke in through a window at 2am on Sunday. They tied the terrified Brits up before launching an attack described as “pure and hateful and pointless torture”. The gang, who struck at Dullstroom in Mpualanga province, refused to believe the couple did not have a safe. The pair were tied up and attacked with a blowtorch being burned all over their bodies as they screamed for help on their remote farm 150 miles from Pretoria. Police said they were put through a horrific ordeal lasting several hours in which they were savagely beaten around the head and burned again and again and later both shot. Eventually the three men bundled the married couple into their own pick up truck with plastic bags over their heads and tape around their necks. They were driven off and Sue was shot twice in the head and Robert in the neck. They were dumped by the roadside by the thugs to die on a mountain pass. Sue had a plastic bag jammed down her throat and Robert had a bag tied round his neck to strangle him. But, incredibly, retired Mr Lynn had survived and managed to free himself and then managed to find his terribly injured wife nearby. Police said she was unrecognisable from her injuries and was in a coma. After her husband raised the alarm she was rushed to hospital, but died 48 hours later. She had multiple fractures to her her skull, gunshot wounds and horrific burns from the blow torch to her breasts. It is thought her life support machine was turned off due to her horrific injuries being unsurvivable on Tuesday morning. Her husband was treated in the intensive care unit but astonishingly has survived and has returned home. It was the third violent farm attack in the province this month. The attack comes after a Welsh couple were murdered in a robbery at their farmland estate in the southern part of the country only days ago. Police are searching for the armed raiders who broke into Christine and Roger Solik's house, tied the couple up and dumped their bodies in a river. The couple moved from Abercynon to South Africa in 1981. Christine, 57, was found dead in a river at Nzinga, Impendle, 45 miles from her home just outside the city of Pietermaritzburg. The body of her husband, Roger, a 66-year-old Parkinson’s sufferer, was discovered later. In the north of the country, Mr Lynn and Mrs Howarth are believed to have lived in the Dullstroom area for over 20 years and although they have different surnames were married. Border collie lover Sue who is originally from Southsea, Hants, was extremely well known in sheepdog trial circles and had three rescue collie dogs of her own. Provincial police spokesman Brigadier Leonard Hlathis said: “They were sleeping on Sunday when they were attacked by three men. "This was violent and horrific attack and we are searching for those responsible." He said terrified Sue was tied and burned with a blow torch and shot and beaten and that her husband was also burned and stabbed repeatedly. Doctors treated him for multiple knife wounds to his stomach hands and neck and a bullet remains in his neck where he was shot by one of the gang. Hi-Tech Security Highlands manager Mr Johan Pierterse said the gang broke in through a window and tied up the couple and demanded cash. “They demanded money but could not find any in the house” he said. He said the attackers then forced the couple into their own bakkie and drove them to a point on the R37 between Belfast and Stoffberg. Mr Pierterse said they threw Lynn into bushes with a blindfold over his eyes. After their attackers left, he moved towards the road where he found Howarth. She was near naked and was later found to have a plastic bag in her throat. A passing car saw the couple and stopped to help them. A Hi-Tech Security vehicle rushed to the scene and an officer Mr Johan Bezuidenhout removed the bag from her throat. He said: “We arranged for an ambulance and notified the police. Howarth was already in a coma and Lynn was in a state of shock and badly injured”. The couple was taken to a local hospital in Belfast and then transported to MidMed Hospital in Middelburg. Mr Nico Uys, chairman of the Dullstroom Farmers Association and chairman of TLU Mpumalanga Safety, told Lowvelder newspaper that both were shot. Mr Uys said they were no longer active farmers, but had been pensioners living on the farm but added that it was clearly a planned attack. Their blue Nissan bakkie was found abandoned in Middleburg. Distraught Robert has been discharged from hospital and returned to their farm and told his local paper the Middleburg Observer he had to “face the demons”. He said: “I have to come to terms with losing my best friend. “I woke up because the dogs were barking and there was a racket at the bedroom window. After I stood up, I heard glass breaking. “I suppose that is when they started shooting at us. I assumed they missed. They were wearing balaclavas and attacked us”. Mr Lynn was pistol whipped with a gun and ordered to lie down. He said: “They kept on asking where the money is. I told them that we don’t keep money but they would not believe me.” Mr Lynn gave them a couple of hundred Rand he had in a money clip and his bank cards telling his attackers that they will be able to withdraw R1000 per day from it. Mr Lynn was taken to the living room and was covered with a blanket. Shortly after, his attackers started burning him with a blow torch on his chest and legs. His hands were tied with baling twine and robbers then started cutting him with a knife in order to get him to confess to keeping more money or a gunsafe somewhere. He said:“They were looking for things we just don’t have. “I said to them that whoever gave them their information, gave them the wrong information. One of them replied with ‘No they didn’t.’” Mr Lynn kept on calling to his wife in the bedroom who he last saw lying in a sleeping position but said she did not answer. He said:“The small dark one, who seemed to be the leader, smacked me over the head with his gun and told me to shut up.” Mr Lynn was put in the back of their Nissan Hardbody double cab and his attackers pulled a black bag over his head. He said:“I suppose they wanted to suffocate me but I managed to bite a tiny hole through the bag through which I could breathe.” He heard his wife moaning as she was thrown into the loading bin of their bakkie. The attackers struggled for a while to reverse the vehicle out of the parking. He said: “I thought we were going to Dullstroom to withdraw money. But then they turned towards Belfast." The attackers drove on back roads through Belfast and Siyathuthuka and onto the road towards Stoffberg. He said: “They kept on stopping and going and when they stopped for good they pulled me out of the vehicle by my hair.” The robbers walked with him into the field where he had to crawl through a barbed wire fence and was ordered to get on his knees. He said:“That was the last thing I remember. I thought I was dead after that until I looked up and saw the stars.” It took Mr Lynn some time to free his hands, after he crawled back to the road. He said: “When I got to the road, something told me to turn right. But left made more sense because it was downhill. I turned right. “I was not steady on my feet so I crawled most of the way. I thought I heard a cow mooing. Later I realised that it was Susan moaning. “I crossed the road, crawling most of the way. On the other side I saw Susan, lying in a ditch. Her hands tied behind her back. She was bleeding from her head.” “I didn’t know what to do. I could see that she was in a very bad state. I could sit with her but the best thing would be to try and get help. “So I stood next to the road. Five trucks and two cars passed me hooting their horns as they did but they did not stop”. His saviours were two friends in a bakkie, pulling a boat, who stopped as dawn broke. Devestated Mr Lynn said: “Susan was a great girl. She had a great life just to end up in a ditch with her hands tied behind her back”. She moved to Dullstroom in 1996 and started the Dullstroom Stables before the farm Marchlands where she was attacked became her home. Susan Howarth passed away in the Midmed Hospital at 9.30 on Tuesday morning never regaining consciousness after the attack. The postmortem will determine exactly what the extent of her injuries were. Her ashes will be flown to Southsea in England where she will be buried with her parents. She was an only child. Meanwhile, Robert Lynn says he will try to pick up the pieces in Dullstroom. He said:”I am amazed how good people have been to me. But I will never be able to forget what evil people are capable of”. Close friend Claire Taylor invited local paper the Middleburg Observer into the hospital to photograph Sue in bed to show the full horror of what local white farmers are going through. She said:”Sue is such a powerful person. She is so strong. She is straight shooter. “She would have wanted the world to see what happened to her. What they did to her” she said in the intensive care unit while husband Robert was being treated 100 yards away in the surgical unit. Tragically she never recovered from her coma and died on Tuesday morning. Sue shared the farm with Claire and they both had a passion for Border Collies and are regular competitors in the South African Sheep Dog Trials. Before settling in Dullstroom, Sue was at the head of a pharmaceutical company in Johannesburg. She kept her maiden hame after marrying Robert who was an electrical engineer for Eskom. A reward is being put together by friends of the couple to try and track down their evil attackers. The couple lived on a farm called Marshland with their three border collie rescue dogs. A spokesman for the Democratic Alliance said yesterday: “Sue and husband Robert were overpowered and tortured and left left for dead. “Since the beginning of February 30 farms have have been attacked and 15 people have lost their lives in farm attacks across the country. “We simply cannot allow these horrendous acts to continue and or our rural communities to live in fear. “We call on the Government to employ rural safety units to protect rural communities from rural crime”. A close friend of Sue’s told a local paper: “She had a heart of gold who made a strong impression on people wherever she went. “She was a well known face at sheepdog trials and had a passion for border collies. “Robert will be devastated at her loss. This is just horrific and it what happened was just pure and hateful and pointless torture”. Col. Phela Mahlangu, head of the detectives at the Middelburg Cluster, said that a task team has been established to work on the case around the clock. http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/british-woman-murdered-husband-left-9901768?ICID=FB_mirror_main
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musicwriter:You be genius. |
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joey150:U finished work |
doctokwus:You just nailed it |
repogirl:EXACTLY my thought. Germany grant asylum to more than a million possible terrorists, what is difficult in accepting 12 thousand Nigerians. I am suspecting Racism |
NwamaziNwaAro:You just confirm my suspicion. Uselu is not probably far from you, please check in fast be4 you enter market. |
NwamaziNwaAro:Low self esteem man spotted. olodo na bad thing oh |
I wonder why we Africans judge a man by the number of wives he married, when we all know polygamy is part of African culture. Many western leaders they adore have divorce more than 3 women. Which is better? In normal Africa climes a man that can manage polygamous family is best suited to rule |
Saint83:Don't be quick to jump into conclusion of anything u don't know about, like ur master APC. You really know nothing about Ijaw and Itsekiri |
pray 1st for economic growth, abi na sand dem wan take marry. |
any country that does not have veto power in UN, her citizens holding any position is powerless, they are just pon in the game of power |
The Official Spokesperson to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Garba Shehu has denied reports that the Economic and Financial Crime Commission’s boss, Ibrahim Magu has been sacked. Garba Shehu on his twitter handled @GarShehu denied the reports. He said that ‘We are reading reports that the @officialEFCC Chairman, Ibrahim Magu has been sacked. The report of his sack is therefore speculative and preemptive. No report has been made available to the Presidency by the Attorney General of the federation over the matter. Government Jobs Attorney Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/12/breaking-news-magu-not-sack/ |
Here’s good news for impotent men who are already at the end of their wits! Instead of having to pop pills each time you want to have sex, scientists have come up with a user-friendly ‘penis’ that becomes rock-rigid and capable of erecting to eight inches on demand. The researchers assure that this ground-breaking metal coil could help millions of impotent men regain their sexual prowess. Urologists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, who crafted the penis implant, say all that is necessary to make the device work is to heat it up by dipping it in hot water, and it will become totally rigid — just like your natural member. When done, they say, the coil can be cooled down by throwing a damp towel on it. The researchers note that thousands of cancer survivors and other people who may have suffered certain injuries that affected their manhood rely on implants. However, they say, unlike this new device, such implants are almost always unable to help them get an erection. “This new device is therefore meant to give hope,” the scientists assure. They add that about 40 percent of men between the ages of 40 and 70 have issues getting an erection. As such, this penis implant will restore their sexual prowess and rid such men of the embarrassing situation. Previous solutions include an inflatable pump that can be awkward to use or a device that leaves the owner with a permanent erection. This latest ground-breaking invention consists of an eight-inch metal coil which looks similar to a paper binder. Made of nickel titanium alloy, it can shrink and grow in changing temperatures. The scientists say surgeons just need to insert the metal coil into the base of the penis, and it should remain flaccid at body temperature but rigid when heated as stated. One of the researchers, Dr. Brian Le, says an obvious way to “turn it on” would be to take a warm bath. The only downside here is the likelihood of having an erection every time the person washes. “It’s a survivorship issue – restoring function can help people feel whole in their bodies again. “We’re hoping that, with a better device, a better patient experience, and a simpler surgery, more urologists would perform this operation, and more patients would want to try the device,” Le said. http://punchng.com/with-ground-breaking-device-impotent-men-can-gain-eight-inches/ |
Mali has sent back two people who were deported from France on the same planes they arrived on, questioning whether they were even Malian citizens. The pair were flown to Bamako using European travel permits or "laissez-passer", not passports or other Malian papers, the government said. The government said it could not accept people "simply assumed to be Malian". Recent reports of a deal with the EU to repatriate failed Malian asylum seekers have sparked protests. In a statement, the Malian government condemned the use of the European "laissez-passez" in cases of expulsion, describing it as "against international conventions". ADVERTISEMENT It also warned airlines not to let people using the document fly to Mali. The French authorities have not yet commented. Malians are among the sub-Saharan African nationalities most deported from France: Senegal - 540 Mali - 290 Ivory Coast - 270 Nigeria - 235 Guinea - 165 Source: Eurostat, 2015 Mali's refusal to admit the two migrants comes as Bamako is under fire at home for having signed a ''migrant return agreement'' with the European Union. Many Malians claim the government has betrayed them by accepting €145m ($153m; £124m) for ''measures to deter migration''. The deal, announced on 11 December, was the first of its kind between the EU and an African country. The Malian anti-corruption group "mains propres'' (clean hands) says the authorities in Bamako were tricked by Brussels, whose own rules require such an agreement before mass expulsions can be triggered.. Bamako and Brussels are now both playing the deal down as ''an agreement with a small A'' or ''a communique on deepening migration partnership''. The EU has since signed a similar document with Niger, which is another major departure country for migrants heading through the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. There is a large Malian community in France, the former colonial power, who support their relatives back home by sending money. More than 360,000 people have reached Europe by crossing the Mediterranean this year. Many pass through Mali on their way although Malians are not among the 10 nationalities most likely to attempt the journey. A $1.9bn (£1.2bn) European Union-backed fund to tackle African migration was announced in November 2015, with African leaders agreeing to allow the return of failed asylum seekers in return for development aid. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-38467244 |
wtfCode:Simple cure for that symptom, please go and marry. lol |




