Tag: Marriage

  • GT Da Guitarman’s marriage hit the rocks

    GT Da Guitarman’s marriage hit the rocks

    The 4- year marriage of Nigerian singer, Gt Da Guitarman has hit the rock, TheNewsGuru gathered.

     

    TheNewsGuru recalls that GT Da Guitarman married his estranged wife, Obiageli Nweyi in 2016. A beautiful inter-tribal Yoruba and Igbo marriage. The duo had known each other for over 8 years prior to their official union.

    GT and Wife during their traditional marriage in April, 2016.

     

    They had met at her place of work where GT usually dry-cleaned his clothes.

    After dating for over three years, they parted ways for close to two years and then reconciled later to eventually get married.

     

    According to a close source to the singer, the couple are going through difficult times, which has led his wife into moving out of their matrimonial home.

     

    The couple have also unfollowed each other on their Instagram accounts with handles @gtdaguitarman and @officialanniegold.

     

  • Can a man rape is wife? – Francis Ewherido

    Can a man rape is wife? – Francis Ewherido

    Francis Ewherido

    The issue of rape is topical at the moment. People are asking questions and someone asked: “Can a husband also be accused of raping his wife?” For me a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer is insufficient. To start with, what is rape? “Rape is a type of sexual assault usually involving sexual intercourse or other forms of sexual penetration carried out against a person without that person’s consent.”

    In Nigerian Criminal Code, Section 357, “any person who has unlawful carnal knowledge of a woman or girl, without her consent, or with her consent, if the consent is obtained by force or by means of threats or intimidation of any kind, or by fear of harm, or by means of false and fraudulent representation as to the nature of the act, or, in the case of a married woman, by personating her husband, is guilty of an offence which is called rape.”

    Legally speaking, a husband cannot be accused of raping his wife in Nigeria, going by this definition of rape. Also in most African traditions, it will be ludicrous for a wife to accuse her husband of rape. Even the family that the woman came from will wonder if their daughter is sane. It is believed that once a man pays a woman’s bride price, he has all rights over her, including conjugal rights. In fact some see the wife as a property. It takes a reasonable man to realize that his wife is not a piece of furniture, but a human being with a mind of her own, feelings, emotions and moods.

    In Christian marriages, rape of a wife should not come in if the spouses follow the Christian teachings and their marital vows. In 1Corinthians 9: 3-5, Paul wrote: “The husband should fulfill his marital duty to his wife, and likewise the wife to her husband. The wife does not have authority over her own body but yields it to her husband. In the same way, the husband does not have authority over his own body but yields it to his wife. Do not deprive each other (sex) except perhaps by mutual consent…” When taking marital vows, spouses promise to love, honour and cherish each other.

    Now this is my take. In marriage, sex should be freely given and taken. Where it is not freely given, under no circumstances should it be forcefully taken. An unsatisfied sexual urge has never killed anybody and it will not kill you. Notable marriage counsellor and youth coach, Mrs. Bridget Itsueli, asked a group of youths I brought together for mentoring 12 years ago: “since you have been reading newspapers, have you ever read any obituary where the cause of death is an unsatisfied sexual urge?”

    Granted that an unsatisfied sexual urge does not kill, why should you deny your spouse his/her conjugal rights? Yes, it is a right, an entitlement. Some spouses deny their spouses sex because they are angry. My question is, if you are angry with your boss in the office — and it happens sometimes — do you refuse to do your work? If your answer is no, the same thing should happen in your marriage. Whether or not you are angry with your spouse, if he/she asks for sex, please give it to him/her. If you like, you can discuss the reason for your anger later. But if you want to bottle up your anger, na you sabi!

    But spouses must act in love and be considerate when dealing with the issue of sex. For instance, if your spouse comes back from work and he/she is exhausted, if you ask for sex and he/she explains to you that he/she is very tired, you should be reasonable enough to let him/her be. There is always another time, which can be as soon as five hours later.

    Some spouses are unbelievably insensitive and selfish. When we were in Ughelli, Delta State, in 1970, there was an uproar. A woman was shouting, “mi vwie nu bo” (I was delivered of a baby only recently) repeatedly. All the woman around, including mama, ran there. I was too young to understand. But what happened was that her husband wanted to sleep with her about three weeks after delivery. Having witnessed some childbirths and post childbirths, I am numb at the man’s insensitivity. But if there are no inhibitions and your spouse is in the mood for sex and you are not, please give it to him/her. You don’t have to enjoy it every time to necessitate you engaging in it. At such times, just take it as your marital duty and fulfil it.

    Now I have a special plea to wives. An author once observed that when a man has an erection, his brain goes on recess. I do not know how sexual urge is with women, but that is how it is for men. E dey make us no dey get sense. As much as possible, do not starve your husband of sex. Even if it means you will just lie there while he pleasures himself, do it. I do not want to write about some of the confessions of men who were denied sex by their wives here, but in mild cases, some of them sulk and sulk for days. Some husbands turn violent and take it force, unfortunately. Men scarcely take rejection in good fate.

    I have heard some shocking marital tales. A woman denied her husband sex because he refused to pay for her aso ebi. Another woman denied her husband sex because he refused to buy her a particular car. Yet another woman denied her husband sex because he refused to build a new house for her parents. One more bizarre tale, a husband demands for and collects money (bribe) from his wife before sleeping with her. It is very wrong to use sex as a weapon in marriage; it is a grievous marital abuse that that should have no place in marriage.

    In the United States, rape of wives is recognized and it is a criminal offence. But I feel enacting laws against rape of spouses alone does not solve the problem. There are other abuses (physical, emotional, psychological, etc.) going on in marriages. The solutions still remain mutual understanding, empathy, respect and love. Where these are absent, there should be laws to give all spouses all-round protection.

    RAPE HAS NO RIDER

    When discussing the issue of rape, some people throw in a rider: provocative dressing by women fuels rape. These people do not get it. A half-naked or naked woman does excite men undoubtedly, but that is not the issue. In Urhobo land, every adult, especially men, has an alias (odova). My grandmother’s was esevweremare (old people’s fashion). If you call her esevweremare, she will respond, “obijiwoni, wo kw’opharo kuphia” (if it offends your sensibilities, turn away). The issue here is choice. Rapists have the choice of looking away. You cannot justify rape because some women dress scantily/provocatively. In any case, 18-year-old Miss Barakat Bello was a hijab-wearing Muslim, yet she was raped and killed in Ibadan last week. It is simply NO, NO and NO to rape, no riders, no preconditions.

  • What will make me give marriage another shot- Yvonne Jegede

    What will make me give marriage another shot- Yvonne Jegede

    Talented actress and mother of one has said she is ready to give marriage another shot.

    During an Instagram Live chat with Mr Paul, she gave conditions that would make her remarry.

    “I would want to remarry if I find somebody who would love me and love my child. Because, right now, my child is the most important person in my life. I wouldn’t want to marry someone who wouldn’t love my son as much as he would love his own child. He has to love my child 100%, love me too and then the feeling is mutual.

     

    “For my ex-husband, I am not a bitter woman. I am not the kind of woman who would swear for her husband or boyfriend if all didn’t go well. My house is open for my son’s dad to come and see him anytime. In my house, there’s a standing law; you don’t curse or insult my son’s father for any reason whatsoever. The fact that we are no longer married doesn’t mean I should go about laying curses (on him),” she stated.

    Jegede also stated that she went under the knife after the birth of her son.

    “Yes, I did surgery (liposuction) on my stomach after I had my son; so, that made me look curvier. I had the surgery here in Nigeria. I don’t have issues with anyone on earth; I do whatever I want with myself and body”.

     

     

     

     

  • Court stops teenager’s forced marriage to cleric as ninth wife

    Court stops teenager’s forced marriage to cleric as ninth wife

    A 16-year old Secondary school student (names withheld) has been reunited with her parents after an Akure Family court stopped her forced marriage to an Islamic Cleric identified as Alhaji Yusuf Lateef.

    The court presided over by Justice Aderemi Adegoroye ordered the return of the girl to her family for proper care and education, and warned Lateef to stay away from her.

    Lateef was to make the teenager who was 15 in 2019 his 9th wife.

    It was gathered that Alhaji Lateef had approached the girl’s parents and sought her hand in marriage in 2019.

    Despite protest by the teenager, her parents forced her to accept the proposal and a day was fixed for the wedding.

    The teenager fled their Ore home on the day fixed for the wedding with support from her brother to Akure, the state capital.

    She was said to have gone to the Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development where she was sheltered and legal works began to stop the marriage.

    Alhaji Lateef and the girl’s parents were arraigned at the Family Court for breaching Part three of the 2007 Ondo State Child Rights Law.

    After hearing from the defendants, the court ruled that the girl be returned to her parents and Alhaji Lateef be made to sign an undertaking to stay away from her as well as ensure no harm comes her way.

    Ondo Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development, Titilola Adeyemi, said it was victory for children in the state.

    “We are excited the matter has gone that way. That will be a warning to everybody that it is no to child marriage in Ondo State. Child marriage is denying a child her future. We must make sure we work for the child to realise her future.”

    The girl said she intended to further her education as well as be a good woman in the future.

    She was handed back to her parents after staying away from her parents for one month and the Cleric was warned to stay away from her henceforth.

  • It’s difficult combining marriage and motherhood – Tonto Dikeh

    It’s difficult combining marriage and motherhood – Tonto Dikeh

    Nollywood actress Tonto Dikeh has said that combining the tasks of marriage and motherhood is a difficult in today’s society.

    The single mother of one made this known on Sunday, May 10 in commemoration of Mother’s Day celebration.

    Tonto wrote in a long caption that Mother’s Day “is a day to salute the strength of mothers”.

    She said “from the inception of pregnancy — the hormonal imbalance, weird cravings, and mood swings that come throughout the gestation period. It’s not a walk in the park to be a mom. Vaginal birth is painful, CS isn’t any less painful – motherhood is indeed a sacrifice. It is something a lot of mothers don’t recover from. Childbirth. And this is why you should carry your body with confidence. Those marks are stripes of your honor and strength.”

    Continuing, she wrote, “today I’m celebrating every single mom too. It’s hard to be a married mother in this society already, how much more single moms who have to go extra miles to provide for their children? Single moms who are stigmatized by society; shamed and scornfully laughed at. Single moms who are seen as second class women — I celebrate you today.

    “In most cases, they walked out of a deadbeat father; they left an abusive partner; they made the choice to prioritize their sanity and peace. I’m proud of you. And to every mother who’s stuck in a bad marriage just because it’s expected of her. I’m here to tell you that motherhood is not the symbol of suffering. Stop self-sabotaging. Stop minimizing your peace. Find the courage to leave any marriage that doesn’t serve your interests too. That time is over when we had to take anything just to be called mothers. We have broken that generational curse, and we are putting ourselves first.

    “Happy Mothers to every mother. single or married, or widowed, you are a superhero. You collaborated with God to bring forth another human; that’s something to be endlessly proud of. Thank You King Andre Dikeh because of you I am called mother.”

    Tonto Dikeh was briefly married to Churchill Olakunle with whom she had a son, Andre, before parting ways over irreconcilable differences. Dikeh’s marriage to Olakunle is riddled with various allegations that include drug abuse, and abusive relationship.

  • BBNaija winner Mercy, co-contestant Ike hint at marriage in new show

    BBNaija winner Mercy, co-contestant Ike hint at marriage in new show

    Following the launch of ‘The Mercy & Ike show’ on April 26, the Big Brother Naija BBNaija ex-housemates have hinted at tying the nuptial knots.

    The first edition of the Mercy & Ike show had Ike put rumours to rest by saying he envisions himself committing to marriage with Mercy.

    Mercy playfully responded by telling him to be sure he was ready to commit before popping the question because she didn’t plan to wear an engagement ring for longer than one month.

    Before the show kicked off, rumours about Mercy and Ike’s true relationship status have been flying around and the pair seem to have given a hint on their next big step.

    In the same episode, Ike had visited Mercy, and as they settle down to eat, Ike says that it’s time he met the rest of Mercy’s family, pointing out that Mercy avoided this during their last visit to Owerri.

    In Ike’s interview session, he revealed that because of their popularity, social media has a lot of impact on their relationship because whatever they do as a couple gets online, and sometimes gets misinterpreted.

    Mercy didn’t mince words in saying Ike does not know how to manage social media.

    The show opened with Mercy and Ike reminiscing about their time in the BBN house and how they formed an alliance to ensure that either of them won. It then goes on to draw us deeper into their personal lives.

    Mercy opens up and talks about growing up in a poor household. At one time, her mother had to sell Akara to support the family, while Mercy would roast corn and sell fuel to make ends meet.

    ‘My mum used to sell Akara, so from there, she graduated from selling Akara to ‘Mama Put’, so maybe that’s why I know how to cook… Then I used to sell fuel and I roasted corn while helping her.’

    She almost broke down in tears when she revealed that while her mother was pregnant with her, she repeatedly tried to lose the pregnancy because of the extreme poverty they faced at that time. Mercy lets us know that that discovery only made her more determined to become successful in life.

    Ike talked about having a regular upbringing in the United States. Life was going well for him until 2017 when a hurricane in the U.S. affected his business and destroyed the apartment he was living in at that time.

    The teasers from the next episode show that Ike wants to move in with Mercy, but apparently, there is some resistance to that idea.

    The Mercy and Ike Show follows the love story of Mercy Eke (winner of the 2019 edition of Big Brother Naija) and Ike Onyeama, another BBN contestant.

    The pair met and bonded in the BBN house, but the Mercy & Ike show is proof that their love did not end there.

  • Marriage na scam – Francis Ewherido

    By Francis Ewherido

    Many young people are increasingly getting disillusioned with the institution of matrimony. Some have seen situations in other marriages, and even in their young marriages, that they did not bargain for and they tell you that marriage is a scam or fraud.

    Today, we want to interrogate marriage and find out if it is actually a scam.

    Many years ago, a man was obsessed with a beautiful young girl. From age 14, he started hovering over the girl. He was worried that another man would deflower her! More worrisome to him was the fear of another man marrying her. By the time she was 18 and out of secondary school, he managed to convince the parents to give her out in marriage to him.

    He promised to fulfil the wish of the parents to send her to the university. Once they got married, the first pregnancy came, followed by another and four subsequently. The song then changed to “if you go to school, who will take care of the children?”

    By the time she got her first degree, she was already in her late 40s. Her father did not live to see her as a graduate. In fact, her first two children graduated before her. What do you call the husband’s action? Deceit, which is another name for scam.

    Some Nigerians, who currently live abroad, did arrangee marriages to get their legal status, sometimes with the consent of the legal wives they left in Nigeria. For some, it worked; they are presently citizens of those countries and living happily with the wife and family they initially left in Nigeria. But for others, play, play don turn to eat and go; the arrangee wives have become real wives and the wives they left in Nigeria are left in the lurch to rue their failed gamble. For the latter group, whatever the original intentions of their spouses, marriage has become a scam.

    There is a company with a relatively high divorce rate among female employees; what happened? These women joined the company as fresh graduates and young wives. Over the last 15 years or more, they have climbed the ladder and now earn humongous salaries. Meanwhile, the husbands of some of these women have either lost their jobs or retired. Some of the husbands in private businesses are not doing as well as they did when they were newly married and they were the breadwinners. Now there is a role reversal and the women are the main providers or the breadwinners. Inability to manage the role reversals is what led to the collapse of their marriages. Will you say their marriages were scams? I do not think so.

    Good courtship gives marriages a good chance of survival. But no courtship can reveal everything about your fiancé/fiancée. Some people are adept at deceit and will hide certain traits from you, especially if they are coming into the marriage with a preconceived game plan, not an open mind. Such spouses are scammers. But there are certain traits of spouses that will become manifest due to changes in circumstances. Even the spouse with the traits might not be conscious of them. Let us take two examples.

    It is often said that give a man (woman) power and you will see his/her true colours. We have seen many examples of it in the past 20 years since the return to civilian rule. That is how it is on the home front also. A man becomes incapacitated and power shifts to the wife and you see a different woman. The other one is money. Riches bring out the true colour of some people. When they come by money, you find out that the person is very arrogant brat and was only humble all this while because of lack. If it is the husband, all of a sudden, the wife of many years is no longer good enough; she is not polished and sophisticated. For some women, they begin to wonder how on earth they married their husbands.

    They wonder whether they were under a spell. Are such marriages scams? No, circumstances changed and the dark side of the spouses manifested.
    Again, these days, some young people are going into marriage as a stepping stone. Some marry to get a pie of their spouses’ family wealth. Some marry to get to a certain social status or get into a particular social circle. Some marry their spouses to get the good education that their poor families background denied them. Once they get to that destination, they discard their spouses like used tissue paper. These are pure scams, not marriages.

    The other reason why some young people feel marriage is a scam is because of illusory expectations and perception of marriage. Some think that after you get married, you live happily thereafter. Who told you marriage is a bed of roses? Even if it is, roses have prickles (shukushuku). Sweetest-smelling marriages also have prickles and couples have to deal with the occasional prickling. The problem with some marriages is that the prickling is not occasional, but the order of the day, making the marriages hellish.
    Now let us look at a scenario of a young couple. They do lovey-lovey and get married. Soon after the wife gets pregnant. Pregnancy hits some women hard. They vomit and spit all over the place; who is supposed to clean the mess? The husband, of course. No be your pikin she carry? Can you do lovey-lovey with a woman in such circumstances? Yes, of course, but not the regular mind-blowing sex you were having before the pregnancy. Now, you need to prepare food for her that she might not even eat; clean the floor if she throws up on it, provide and empty the bowl she will spit into, run water for her to have her bath and generally be there for her. That is part of the “for worse” aspect of the “for better, for worse” vow you took during your marriage.

    Some young husbands did not prepare themselves for this. They abandon their wives and go and hang out with the boys. Then when the baby is born, you want to hang around as the proud father. And you think your wife will forget that you abandoned her in her moment of need? Then later you want her to get pregnant for a second baby. I have had to settle disputes among young couples over having more children. This is one of the reasons.

    Also, some young men are fixated on the external beauty of their girlfriends/fiancées. We all like beautiful women, but you must realise that external beauty is ephemeral. Have you seen the photos of some of these “ugly” old mamas (some people dare call them “old witches”) when they were young? They were stunning beauties. The “deterioration” starts once wives start having babies. The first two casualties are their flat tummies and breasts. How a pouch forms in the tummy and how the breasts suddenly collapse is still magic to some young husbands. Men also undergo changes that their wives have to cope with. These are some of the changes, which some young people did not prepare for before getting married, that are making marriage look like a scam to them.

    Now this is my take on the matter. The marital institution is not a scam. It was created by God and everything God created is good. But like many of other God’s creations, the marital institution has been polluted by humans. So, some marriages are actually scams, pure deceits. It is the responsibility of everyone going into marriage to shine his/her eyes to ensure he/she is not scammed. Unfortunately, many people going into marriage are beclouded by lust during courtship and are unable to shine their eyes.

  • Between Blessing Okagbare and her hubby – Francis Ewherido

    BY Francis Ewherido

    Let us take a break from COVID-19-related articles today and talk about marriage. When I read for the first time that the marriage between Blessing Okagbare, one of Nigeria’s foremost athletes, and Igho Otegheri, a former Super Eagles player, was on the verge of packing up, I felt sad. Every separation, break up or divorce diminishes the marital institution.

    But when I read the reason for the crash of the marriage in last Monday’s Vanguard, I did not know whether to be sad or angry. The report said they are breaking up because of something they should have agreed on before marriage: when to start having children.

    Before you tie the nuptial knot, there are some fundamental agreements you need to reach with your spouse. They include the number of children you want to have, the timing (when you want to have them, all things being equal), and the religious bent of the formation of the children (that is if you practice different religions, like Christianity and Islam, or you belong to the same religion but different denominations: Catholicism and Deeper Life).

    When they got married in 2014, Blessing was 26 years. From age 32, most athletes would either have peaked or passed their peak. They scarcely get better after age 32, so Blessing has either hit her peak or past her peak. So, she should be retiring soon, why is it now they will be divorcing over when they will start having children? Na now when dem don chop rat reach tail dem go dey complain say e dey bitter? The story did not make much sense to me. I went online and as I read, I began to piece things together.

    There are other reasons, but the husband has said he will not say anything to tarnish the reputation of Blessing. That is a wonderful disposition and I hope Blessing reciprocates.

    Blessing was the one who filed for divorce, citing laziness, infidelity and irreconcilable differences, according to reports. My advice to Blessing is, otere (it is enough). No more public washing of dirty linen. They should quietly sort themselves out and reconcile or go their separate ways. They should not vilify each other.

    For the rest of us, there are lessons to be learnt, not necessarily because it is the situation with Blessing and Igho, but because these issues crop up in marriages every now and then. I was looking at the photos of an obviously happy couple dancing away just six years ago. Now Blessing wants out.

    So, number one lesson, young peopleee, marriage is very deep. You can never get to the bottom, but it helps to know as much as you can about the marital institution and the person you want to spend the rest of your life with before you jump into marriage. This happens during courtships. Have a proper courtship. We have discussed courtship exhaustively previously, so we will not go into details today.

    Two, young men, no woman wants to marry a lazy man, in or out of bed. Today, we are discussing “out of bed.” You have to work hard, no alternatives. But before that, you need to be purposeful so that you are focussed, not aimless hustling or pursuits. Lack of purpose will make your hard work fruitless, thereby making you look like a lazy man.

    Three, there is nothing wrong with marrying a richer woman. But your plan must not be to live off her after marriage. You must work hard to stand as a man. I know a few of Nigeria’s heavyweights today. When they got married, they were nowhere near their wives in terms of finances and social status. Some even moved in with their wives, instead of vice versa, because their abodes were miserably substandard compared to their wives’.

    To insist that their wives should move into their abodes then because they are the husbands would have been tantamount to witchcraft. But they worked hard and now they can hold their own. Two of them live in their own houses in Ikoyi.

    Four, it is not compulsory for the husband to be richer than the wife in a marriage, but it is important that a man should have his own money. For example, Serena Williams is worth about $180m while her husband, Alexis Ohanian, is worth about $70m. No woman should cater for a man all his life. It does not happen these days. If it happened in the past, it was an anomaly. A REASONABLE wife will tolerate a husband who makes effort, who works hard, who earns an income, even if he does not earn as much as she earns. But no woman will tolerate an able-bodied husband who lazes around 24/7 while the woman is out there working. That is not marriage, it is slavery.

    I will drum it into my daughters’ heads, they should not bring a lazy son-in-law-to-be to me. I will find out and throw a spanner into their plans. It is not about the person’s net worth as at the time I am meeting him. I have said it here before. The two criteria any young man must fulfil before thinking of marriage are: a regular source of income and a roof over his head, owned or rented, a mansion or single room. Then the young man must be purpose-driven and focussed. Without purpose and focus, you are not likely to be successful in the current Nigerian environment.

    Five, we have also discussed it here extensively. My position is that during courtship, parents and family members can be involved in the relationship. It is nothing new; it is part of our tradition. Before marriage in those days, parents dug into the family roots of the potential spouses of their children. It is a wonderful tradition that should be sustained. The family should act as check and balance. Beyond that, many people who are courting need help because they are blinded by lust. They do not notice character flaws of their potential spouses. Even when they notice, they rationalise that they will make their spouses to change after marriage. From experience, and we have also pointed it out here, you can guarantee change from only one spouse after marriage, and that spouse is you. You have no right to tell your spouse to change what you condoned during courtship. That is treachery.

    Six, after marriage, couples should not allow any form of interference in their marriage from family and friends. In marriage, there is space for only the couples. Once family members get involved, the cooks get too many and they can easily mess up the broth. External parties can only INTERVENE in marriages during crisis that the couples are unable to resolve, not INTERFERE; and these external forces should not be family members. Family members tend to take sides with their own; that is why they are mostly incapable of intervening. We have drawn the line between interference and intervention previously.

    For the sake of new readers, interference means, ‘to meddle,’ ‘to obstruct a process,’ ‘be a hindrance.’ Intervention, on the other hand, means ‘mediation.’ I have also said it previously, I will only get involved in my children’s marriage on one condition: if their life is threatened. No good parent wants to be pre-deceased by his children.

  • COVID-19: New York approves marriage via videolink

    COVID-19: New York approves marriage via videolink

    Residents of New York will be able to hold their weddings via videolink while the city’s marriage office is closed due to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.

    State Governor Andrew Cuomo, who issued an executive order to that effect, made this known on Saturday.

    “I am issuing an Executive Order allowing New Yorkers to obtain a marriage license remotely and allowing clerks to perform ceremonies via video conference,” Cuomo stated.

    Usually at least one of the engaged pair is required to attend the marriage bureau in person to obtain the marriage permit.

    Strict measures that limit movement will stay in place until mid-May in New York, the U.S. epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak.

    More than 13,000 have died in New York City from the COVID-19 disease caused by the virus, according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.

  • Why I chose to ignore my ex-wife’s allegations – Olakunle ‘Abounce’ Fawole

    Why I chose to ignore my ex-wife’s allegations – Olakunle ‘Abounce’ Fawole

    Nollywood actor, Olakunle Fawole, popularly known as Abounce has stated why he refused to react over the backlashes and criticisms, his ex-wife, actress Yvonne Jegede throw at him.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) recalls that Olakunle got married to Yvonne back in 2017.

    However, Jegede shocked many when she revealed that she quit her marriage three months after she was pregnant with her son.

    She said: “We started having issues before the birth of Xavier. I think I was about two to three months pregnant when the issues came. Immediately the issues came, there was never a dull moment, it just kept going up and up and it got worse and it got bad and today here we are.

    “Right now, we are not living together, and we are not living as husband and wife, we are not husband and wife anymore and I would say a mutual agreement to go our separate ways. It didn’t work out, it wasn’t working out.”

    Despite the allegations, Jegede levelled against Fawole, the actor kept mum on the issue of their separation.

    Sharing why he kept mum over Jegede’s allegations, Fawole said: ”I think I am just a calm person, that’s it, that’s why I choose to ignore them. I feel it is not worth it, there is no need. Well, I can say I am single for now,” he told independent.ng.

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