Tag: apology

  • Chelsea coach Tuchel confirms Lukaku apology

    Chelsea coach Tuchel confirms Lukaku apology

    Chelsea coach Thomas Tuchel says Romelu Lukaku has apologised for last week’s controversial interview.

    Lukaku was dropped for Sunday’s draw with Liverpool.

    Tuchel said today: “We have given it time to look calmly back on. He apologised and is back in the squad for today’s training.

    “For me, the most important thing was to understand – and clearly understand – it was not intentional. He did not do this intentionally to create this kind of noise in front of a big game.

    “Even before, when he seemed to be, in his opinion, ready to play after his injury from the start and we thought he needed to readapt to the intensity a little bit more, there was never the slightest behaviour against the team.

    “So, it was the very first time that he felt in this way. It’s very important points to understand and stay calm and understand it’s not that big as maybe people want it to be.

    “It’s also not small, but it’s small enough to stay calm, accept an apology and to move on forward.”

    Tuchel agrees that Lukaku’s comments were a bit confusing, given that the 28-year-old had said he was “committed” to the club.

    “That’s why it was so surprising to me,” said Tuchel. “Because he was on his way and he scored against Aston Aston Villa and the next game.

    “He was there and decisive and we had the feeling that it was really a new start after injury and Covid.

    “So, that why it was a big surprise.”

    Tuchel says Lukaku “does not hold back in his opinions”.

    “Credit to him for that,” adds Tuchel. “Sometimes he wears his heart on his sleeve but we should not blame him and focus on the negative side of it.

    “We have to adapt to it and yes, it created some noise – which normally you absolutely don’t want.

    “But there are zero doubts in his commitment to the team and to the club.”

  • ‘I’m sorry’ – Lukaku apologises to Thomas Tuchel

    ‘I’m sorry’ – Lukaku apologises to Thomas Tuchel

    Chelsea striker Romelu Lukaku has apologised for his controversial interview during talks with manager Thomas Tuchel.

    A meeting was held yesterday and Lukaku now is in line to return to the Chelsea squad against Tottenham tomorrow.

    Lukaku held a productive meeting with Tuchel in which he is thought to have expressed his regret over going public about his unhappiness at Stamford Bridge and the subsequent fallout, says the London Evening Standard.

    The striker was left out entirely against Liverpool on Sunday but trained yesterday with other players who did not start that game and expects to be reintegrated into the squad.

    If recalled to the team, Lukaku will have an immediate opportunity to make amends with unhappy Chelsea fans when the Blues face Spurs at Stamford Bridge tomorrow night in the first leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final.

  • ‘I disrespected Mompha’ – Bobrisky tenders public apology

    ‘I disrespected Mompha’ – Bobrisky tenders public apology

    controversial crossdresser Idris Okuneye aka Bobrisky has tendered a public apology to Mompha a few days after the popular socialite with the real name Ismail Mustapha threatened to sue the crossdresser for defamation.

    Bobrisky apologized in a video now viral for disrespecting Mompha.

    Bob as he is fondly called also refuted rumors that he once dated Mompha. Bobrisky described Mompha as a brother.

    “Mompha is a great guy. He is an awesome guy. He is a perfect gentleman that I really respect so much. I can’t really remember how me and Mompha started but one thing I can remember is he is a great guy,” he said.

    “Mompha has never judged me before. He is like a brother to me. He has been there. Even before I became so famous. Mompha has been there.

    “It’s so wrong of me. I disrespected him and that is why I am doing this video to tell him I am sorry. A lot of people don’t want to see me happy. Mompha is a great guy. Mompha and I never, ever dated. Mompha is my brother.”

    The crossdresser however, made another controversial claim in the video saying if Momopha wishes, he can go ahead with his lawsuit.

    “Like I said, I messed up and that is why I am doing this video, to apologise to him that I am deeply sorry. I want him to forgive me,” he added.

    “He can still go ahead with the suing. He can still sue me but I feel like it is 2022, I don’t want to have issues with anybody.”

  • Mompha demands N1bn from Bobrisky, apology in two national dailies

    Mompha demands N1bn from Bobrisky, apology in two national dailies

    Popular cross dresser, Ismail Mustapha, aka Mompha, has demanded the sum of one billion Naira from Cross dresser, Idris Okuneye, aka Bobrisky as damages and compensation for the malicious publications against him.

    Recall that Mompha warned Bobrisky to stop mentioning his name in his fight with anyone online.

    Bobrisky, who took offence, claimed Mompha borrows his car in Lagos, while also alleging the latter as an audio billionaire who rents vehicles in Dubai just to show off.

    Reacting, Mompha in a letter signed by his lawyer, Clement Benjamin asked Bobrisky to retract the said publications made about him on social media and issue an apology to be published in two major national newspapers, as well as online news outlets in the next seven days.

    Mompha threatened to take Bobrisky to court if he failed to meet the listed demands within seven days after receiving the letter.

    The letter read: “It is by the reckoning of our Client, a deliberate attempt sponsored and/or designed to malign his image and cast aspersion on his personality in front of his teeming social media fans and followers and most especially the general public.”

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Mompha warned Bobrisky against using his name to chase clout after he was dragged into an ongoing online squabble with Nollywood actress, Tonto Dikeh.

    Bobrisky ignored the warnings and went ahead to share old chats between himself and Mompha in which he appeared to beg the crossdresser for his car on Instagram.

    In the petition, Mompha also denied Bobrisky’s allegations which had stirred several reactions on social media.

    “Regarding the aspect of borrowing Bobrisky’s car while in Lagos, I never borrowed a car from him at any point, I only asked him to come with Velar because that is the only good car he has as of March 21, 2020; what an insult!,” Mompha wrote.

     

  • Singer, 2face finally reacts to Annie Idibia’s apology

    Singer, 2face finally reacts to Annie Idibia’s apology

    Popular singer, 2face Idibia has reacted to his wife Annie Idibia’s apology.

    The revered entertainer shared a picture of himself and Annie on Instagram on Saturday, saying that people are taking advantage of their pain and acting like they are better than them. He also mentioned that whether they are together or not, all will be well.

    “Nobody holy pass. On top my/we/our pain dem want to claim say them holy. Together or not it shall be well,” he wrote.

    Annie had earlier apologised to her husband, her in laws and the public for her outburst on September 2 when she accused 2face of spending nights at his baby mama’s house.

    “I Want to Apologize To My Husband , Inno .. I Am So Sorry I Threw You Out There Like I Did , (so unwise ) That Isn’t The Kind Of Woman You Married, Totally Sorry For all the Mental Stress And Heart Break It Caused You, So Sorry I Put Both Our Families Out There I, The Way I Did I still Bi Your Smallie oo.

    “To My Beautiful Mothers. My Amazing Mother And My Beautiful Mother In- Law .. I am Sooo Sorry I Let Both Of You down .. No Mother Should Go Through The Kind Of Pain That You Both Felt .. I Am Really Sorry.(I am still your baby) I am Far From Perfect, But I Have Decide To Choose Peace . And I Wanna Do Better, Given The Chance . To Both My Families- The Macaulays And The Idibias, I Am Sorry For All The Pain And Disrespect Towards Both Familes… Pls Forgive Me .Una No Fit Throw Way Una Pikin ooo,” she wrote in parts.

     

     

  • I made bad decisions, forgive me – Annie Idibia apologizes to 2face, others

    I made bad decisions, forgive me – Annie Idibia apologizes to 2face, others

    Annie Idibia, wife to award winning singer, 2face Idibia has apologized to him for the pain her actions caused their families (Both hers and that of 2face’s.)

    TheNewsGuru had reported that in September, Annie accused 2face of alleged infidelity with his ex-lover, Pero.

    She also claimed that his family and management dislike her.

    This led to a war of words between Annie’s family, the Macaulays and the Idibias.

    Following the development, 2face, after warning his family members to stop the madness as he would not sit back and watch everybody ‘battle’ in the name of love, fled the country.

    However, Annie in a post on her Instagram page on Saturday called for peace as she turns 37.

    The mother of two said she let a lot of people down.

    ”The last 10 weeks have been the worst of my entire life. Yes the worst since I was born. I have gone from being so angry to being so broken and back to anger. And then Sadly which I am ashamed to admit suicide.

    ”I allowed my emotions to lead me into making bad decisions, allowed my anger and emotions, to make me act on something that’s wasn’t true cause I was kept in dark.

    ”I want to apologise to my husband, Inno. I am so sorry I threw you out there like I did (so unwise). That isn’t the kind of woman you married. I’m totally sorry for all the mental stress and heartbreak it caused you.

    ”So sorry I put both our families out there the way I did (I still be your smallie o). To my beautiful mothers, my amazing mother and my beautiful mother-in-law, I am so sorry I let both of you down.

    “No mother should go through the kind of pain that you both felt. I am really sorry (I’m still your baby). I am far from perfect, but I have decided to choose peace, and I want to do better, given the chance.

    ”To both my families- The Macaulays and the Idibias, I am sorry for all the pain and disrespect towards both families. Please forgive me. Una No Fit Throw Way Una Pikin ooo,” She wrote on Instagram.

     

  • Bauchi Government orders monarch to apologise for negligence of duty

    Bauchi Government orders monarch to apologise for negligence of duty

    The Bauchi State Government on Friday asked the Emir of Misau, Ahmed Suleiman, to tender an apology for his negligence of duty to the state government.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalled that Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State suspended Suleiman, the First Class Emir of Misau, and two other traditional rulers over a land crisis between farmers and Fulani herders in the area.

    Alhaji Mukhtar Gidado, the Senior Special Assistant on Media to the Bauchi State Governor, disclosed this in a statement made available to NAN in Bauchi.

    He said the warning was contained in the government white paper from the report of the Administrative Committee of Inquiry which looked into the land dispute between Farmers and Herders in Zadawa Ward of Hardawa District, Misau Local Government Area.

    “Various Administrative sanctions have been taken against some Traditional institutions found to be culpable or complicit in the crisis.

    “Government has accepted the recommendation of the Committee to warn the Emir of Misau for dereliction of duty which fuelled and escalated the fatal crisis in his domain.

    “The Emir is to equally apologize to the Government in writing,” Gidado said.

    He said the government accepted the suspended District Head of Chiroma, Alhaji Ahmadun Amadu, to remain pending another investigation. Should he be found wanting, he will be removed and prosecuted.

    According to him, the Misau Emirate Council is to ensure that Ibrahim Yusuf Atiku is immediately relieved of his appointment from the post of Wakili of Zadawa Village Head.

    “Government also recommended that the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice should liaise with the Commissioner of Police to arrest and prosecute Ibrahim Yusuf Atiku for fraudulent allocation of the forest and extortion of money from the allottees,” he said.

    Gidado said the Emirate Council should equally ensure that Ibrahim Yusuf Atiku is barred from aspiring to the office of Sarkin Zadawa in the event the position becomes vacant.

    He added that the government also retired some local government officials from. They include the Director of Administration and General Services, Malam Sule Abba, the Director, Agriculture and Natural Resources, Malam Baba Waziri, and Director of Works, Aminu Disina, all of the Misau Local Government Council.

    He said further investigation was recommended for the 16 identified persons who were alleged to have participated in masterminding and fuelling the crisis in the area.

  • Probe: FCMB tenders public apology to Magu’s ‘spiritual father’

    Probe: FCMB tenders public apology to Magu’s ‘spiritual father’

    First City Monument Bank (FCMB) has tendered a public apology to Emmanuel Omale, general overseer of Divine Hand of God Prophetic Ministries International.

    Prophet Emmanuel Omale, who claims to be the spiritual guide of the suspended acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Ibrahim Magu, had sued First City Monument Bank Plc for N5bn.

    In the suit marked FCT/HC/CV/2020, Omale stated that FCMB falsely reported to the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit that N570m was paid into his church account.

    He said the allegations led to accusations that the money was used in purchasing a house in Dubai for Magu.

    The statement of claim read in part, “Sometime on or about the 6th day of July 2020 the former acting Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu was arrested and summoned to the Presidential Villa, Abuja, to appear before the Presidential Investigation Committee on the Alleged Mismanagement of the EFCC, Federal Government Recovered Assets and Finances From May 2015 to May 2020.

    “That one of the key allegations leveled at the Presidential Investigation Committee against Mr. Ibrahim Magu, was that the 2nd Claimant (Prophet Omale) fraudulently and corruptly purchased a real estate property for Mr. Ibrahim Magu in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates with the said sum of N573, 228, 04 allegedly credited as an inflow into the 1st Claimant’s (church’s) Corporate Current Account No: 1486743019 in the year 2016.”

    Omale stated that due to the investigation and negative media reports, his family was exposed to public ridicule and their spiritual calling was insulted.

    However, the bank has now tendered a public apology to Omale.

    In a letter dated September 11, and titled “Re: Bank Negligence Occasioning Unique Investigation and Defamation to our Client” with copies of the public apology attached, the bank explained that the sum of N573 million was mistakenly paid into Omale’s account and also denied that the error was intentionally done to tarnish the image of the cleric.

    The apology was published in three national newspapers: The Guardian, Daily Trust, and BusinessDay.

    Adewale Fati and Olugbenga Elemide, the bank’s legal counsel who signed the letter, stated that the bank regrets the error.

    “Please be informed that in line with the undertaking contained in our aforementioned letter, we have published in three national newspapers (The Guardian newspaper, Daily Trust newspaper and BusinessDay newspaper) on September 11, 2020. Please find attached herewith copies of our public apology to Divine Hand of God Ministries,” the letter reads.

    “It is our hope that the public apology has assuaged the grievances of your client, having seen that the error was indeed not borne out of any malice towards them.

    “Kindly extend our good wishes to your client, whilst assuring you of our warm professional regards”

  • No apology after fifteen million murders, By Owei Lakemfa

    KING Philippe of Belgium descends from his heavenly throne this week to sign a letter to President Félix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo of the Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC, acknowledging for the first time in 113 years, Belgium’s genocide in that country. Philippe danced round the subject of his country’s massacre of over 15 million Congolese men and women, children and adults, the old and the young. He mentioned “deepest regrets” for the “suffering and humiliation” Belgium inflicted on the African people. But he never rendered an apology. That would be too much for a Belgian monarch, one of whose predecessors, King Leopold II, led Belgians to inflict unconscionable pain on humanity. Rather, he talked glibly about the need “to further strengthen our ties and develop an even more fruitful friendship”, adding “we must be able to talk about our long common history in all truth and serenity”.

     

    It was to mark this Tuesday, the 60th anniversary of the DRC’s independence, one which lasted three months before the murderous Belgians and their British and American first cousins unleashed another round of atrocities, murdering more Congolese for another four decades. Belgium’s genocide in the DRC has been the bloodiest, most atrocious, most inhumane and most outrageous in human history.

     

    While the Holocaust in which some six million Jews were exterminated by the Germans in one of the most insane acts ever perpetuated by human beings is still being talked about, documented and made into films with memorials, there is silence in the Congo case which had three times more casualties. The difference is that those killed in the Holocaust were Whites while the victims in the Congo were Blacks. That is why the beneficiaries of the African tragedy who, until today, swim in the riches stolen by King Leopold II cannot apologise not to talk about returning part of the stolen wealth. Leopold II from his business of killing so many human beings and amputating hands and limbs, made a personal profit of some 220 million francs (or $1.1 billion in today’s dollars) from a country he never set foot.

     

     

    In his insulting letter, King Philippe, a cousin of the butcher Leopold II wrote: “Our history is made of common achievements but has also experienced painful episodes. During the period of the Congo Free State, acts of violence and cruelty were committed, which still weigh on our collective memory.” What are the “common achievements” between the robbery squads from the Belgian monarchy and governments, and the Congolese people?

     

    Leopold II wiped out villages that did not meet his rubber quota demands, children as young as five years were amputated if they were found not to be hard working; it was death penalty for adults who did not meet quota allocations. For education, the Belgians allowed only orphans to be taught in Catholic schools, to be soldiers or workers for the King. His criminal enterprise also brought people from China, Nigeria, the Caribbean, Zanzibar and other African countries to slave in the DRC.

     

    Although they were all colonialists carrying out forced labour, theft, exploitation of the African peoples and massacre of the colonised people, and despite being first cousin of Britain’s Queen Victoria, the European establishment thought Leopold’s atrocities were too extreme and moved against him by establishing an International Commission which confirmed the genocide. But rather than allow the Congolese to be free, the country was handed over to the Belgian government whose further 52-year rule was better only by degrees.

     

    If the King cannot apologise, what about the Belgian government? In 2019 during a visit to Belgium, a team of United Nations Human Rights experts established “clear evidence that racial discrimination is endemic in institutions in Belgium”. So, will such a system apologise to the African people?

     

    Yes, there have been Black Lives Matter protests in Belgium during which some made critical remarks against Leopold II, but there are many in the country’s leadership who see nothing wrong in his criminalities. Just in June, Prince Laurent, King Philippe’s brother, rose to the defence of Leopold II with the unintelligent talk: “He never went to [DR Congo] himself. I do not see how he could have made people there suffer.” He, however, said whenever he met African heads of state he always apologised “for the actions Europeans have done to Africans in general”. That is his way of saying Belgians were not the only criminals who looted Africa blind. A possible difference is that while other Europeans looted Africa as governments or traders and colonised it, Leopold II saw the DRC as his personal estate over which he had proprietorial control over its people, resources and lands like a man owns a farm and its animals. Yes, to him, Africans were not human beings, they were at best animals who were not even entitled to animal rights. Yet the size of the DRC is 2.345 million kilometres while the entire Belgium is 30,689 kilometres, which means the DRC is 7,581 percent larger.

     

     

    Despite the documentation of his unspeakable Hitlerite actions, Leopold believed he was a missionary. He was quoted as saying: “I undertook the work of the Congo in the interest of civilisation and for the good of Belgium.”

     

    The DRC was led to independence by a principled trade unionist, Patrice Lumumba, a former postal worker. Within weeks of the June, 1960 independence, the Belgians sent troops to strengthen a revolt in the Katanga region. As Prime Minister, Lumumba asked for United Nations troops, but under the influence of Belgium, Britain and United States whose President Dwight D. Eisenhower ordered Lumumba’s assassination, the UN troops put Lumumba under house arrest. He escaped from the UN troops but was captured in flight.

     

    Taken to the rebel enclave of Katanga where he and two other senior officials were tied to trees in the forest and executed under the command of the Belgian troops. The corpses were then butchered and soaked in acid. One of the Belgian officers, Gerard Soete, took Lumumba’s teeth as trophy which until today, is kept in his house in Belgium.

     

    The DRC, Africa’s richest country in terms of natural resources, remains unstable until today with local and international gangsters roaming the country and looting its resources.

     

  • FG accepts Ghana’s apology over embassy demolition

    FG accepts Ghana’s apology over embassy demolition

    Nigeria has expressed satisfaction over the moves by the Government of Ghana to address the demolition of the residence of the Nigerian High Commissioner in Accra.

    Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, told newsmen in Abuja on Thursday, that the government had taken note of the efforts of President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo and Ghanaian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Shirley Ayokor Botchwey to calm the situation.

    He however expressed concerns that reports indicated that the perpetrators of the act were unhindered and had a lot of time despite calls to the Ghanaian authorities by the Charge d’Affaires of the Nigerian High Commission in Ghana.

    He added that further reports indicated that the security operatives who were on ground during the demolition, seemed to have been supportive of those carrying out the violation on Nigeria’s Sovereign territory in Ghana.

    He however noted that the perpetrators had been arrested and arraigned in court and the government of Ghana had apologised and equally promised to rectify all the pending paper works that led to the misinformation of the Lands Commission in Ghana.

    “The Government of Ghana has assumed total responsibility and with the apology, have made it clear that they will be responsible for restitution – rebuilding the building to the state that it was when it was destroyed.

    “So, this is to say that the matter has been satisfactorily resolved and that at very highest level as I mentioned, President Muhammadu Buhari personally engaged in this process.

    “The President of Ghana has apologised, those who carried out the action have been arrested and charged to court and the Ghana government has agreed to rebuild the property.

    “So, we would like to put the matter to rest and to acknowledge the very speedy reaction of the Ghanaian government and to say that we will now continue to further strengthen relations between our two countries, take lessons learnt from what has happened and move ahead without recriminations,” Onyeama said.