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IN PICTURES: PDP Splits, Seven Governors, Oyinlola, Atiku, Baraje, Others Form New Faction

Posted on Saturday 31 August 2013 No comments

Saturday 31 August 2013







Nigeria’s ruling Peoples Democratic Party has finally officially split into at least two factions.


A new faction, consisting of seven of the party’s 23 governors has announced that it has taken over the party.
At a press briefing in Abuja, Abubakar Kawu Baraje, a former acting National Chairman of the PDP, was announced as the leader of the new faction of the party.

The press briefing was attended by at least seven governors including those of Kano, Sokoto, Rivers, Jigawa, Kwara, Adamawa, and Niger.

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar was also at the press briefing. A former Osun State Governor and National Secretary of the PDP, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, was announced as the National Secretary of the new PDP faction.

The party leaders said they took the decision to salvage the PDP from those who have hijacked it.

Photos below ...

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BREAKING NEWS: BBATheChase Beverly Osu Hospitalized [DETAILS]

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Many do not know, but Nigeria's Big Brother Africa, BBA, representative in the 2013 edition of the reality show, Beverly Osu has not been feeling well since the last day of the show in South Africa.

According to NET, Beverly was said to have sustained an ankle injury on the finale of the reality show while climbing the stage and I hear the situation was getting more serious than she had thought.
Beverly who returned on Tuesday night was admitted on Wednesday at FaithCity Hospital, Oju Olobun Close, off Bishop Oluwole Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

She is said to be responding to treatment. Fellow housemate Melvin and Uti Nwachukwu were some of the first people to visit her in the hospital.
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CHECK-OUT Tonto Dikeh`s no-make up Stunning pics!!!!

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See more stunning pic After Cut!!

 
 
 Rate her on a scale of 10???
 
 
 
 
 

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Sean Kingston Sued for Alleged Gang Rape

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Sean Kingston will have to face a judge for an alleged sexual assault, reports TMZ. The plaintiff, Carissa Capeloto, filed a multi-million dollar civil suit claiming that she was gang raped in Kingston's hotel room by him, his bodyguard and a member of his band.


According to Capeloto, 22, she was invited for a meet-and-greet with the "Party All Night" singer following a Justin Bieber concert in 2010. Kingston, 23, had also performed that night. When she arrived at his hotel room, he was naked and in bed. The bodyguard forced her onto Kingston, and he, Kingston and a band member had sex with her while she was "obviously intoxicated, incapable of consent." She had consumed 7-10 shots of vodka and smoked marijuana.

Capeloto says that her friend entered the room to help her and the police were called.

The police interrogated Kingston. Capeloto was transported to a hospital where she was treated for injuries. But criminal charges were dropped after the authorities concluded Capeloto's story wasn't credible.

Capeloto says she's been having trouble sleeping and suffers from mood swings and panic attacks since the incident and is seeking $5 million.

Kingston has filed a counter claim, insisting that the sex was consensual. The two will go to trial in November.
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Daniel Ohikhena the stowaway teenager to get scholarship offer!!!! (READ)

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Sha

De Raufs, a volunteer group extolling the virtues of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the Governor, state of Osun, has volunteered to sponsor 15year old stowaway teenager, Daniel Ohikhena who sensationally hid in the tyre compartment of Arik air flight from Benin to Lagos.
In a statement signed by the Director General of the group, Comrade Amitolu Shittu, the group stated that it  is ready to give scholarship to Daniel up to university level and help him realise his dream of travelling by air legitimately.


Shittu said, genius and ambitious citizens of our country must not besuffocated on the alter of political and bureaucratic enforcement, the little boy’s ambition should be nurtured through qualitative
education, and the group is ready to give the boy all the necessary support to make his dream a reality.
We are  sincerely willing to offer him the scholarship in other to encourage thousands of teenagers who are genius and ambitious, the leaders in Nigeria fail on their part to see the potential of the little boy ,therefore De Raufs take up the responsibility to safe the future of this great boy and not turning him to criminal.
The parent of the boy should contact the secretariat of our group for further briefing. The group stated.

Source  leadershipNG
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IN PICTURES: Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Special Convention In Abuja

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The troubled Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had a special delegates convention at the Eagles Square Abuja today. Though the convention was later marred by infighting and emergence of a breakaway faction of the party, our photographers gave us a glimpse into how it all went down before things fella apart.
 Photo Credit: Sahara Reporters Media Group

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Beverly Osu Talks About S*x With Angelo, His Gf & AfroCandy's Movie Offer

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 Beverly Osu and Angelo
Beverly Osu was on radio this morning where she spoke about her BBA experienc!
  Read what she said below:

                       
Did you have s*x with Angelo
I did not have s*x with Angelo. I loved him and I still love him. I would get married to Angelo if I had the chance!

And the bathtub scene...
 I'll still say....Nothing happened between me and Angelo!

Did you use any strategy
I talk a lot. My strategy was nothing. I just went with the flow...

Your take on Afrocandy’s movie offer 
Afrocandy nibo? No oooo.....Thanks for the offer but NO!

On her plans for the future
I’ll continue with my online reality show “Beverly Says” and I’ll finish school. That’s what is important now.

            

                                    Do You Believe Her???


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Ese Walter Writes Again: Releases Affair Evidence With Pastor Biodun To 'Respected Minister'

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I'm sure by now you all know who Ese Walter is. (Refresh your memory here and here). She took to her blog yesterday to write about the aftereffect of her last post, where she accused pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo of Common Wealth Of Zion Assembly of sexual manipulation. 

Read below...


About six months ago, I was watching a lot of Apple ads on YouTube and heard something that has never left me. You should watch the YouTube video, it’s truly inspiring. Here’s what I heard:

“Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in square holes, the ones who see things differently, they are not fond of rules and have no respect for the status quo.

You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them but the only thing you can’t do, is ignore them because they change things.

They push the human race forward and while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius because the people, who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.”



The past week has ‘killed’ me. It has stripped me of whatever ‘self-importance’ I nursed in the corners of my mind. It has broken me and opened me up to my real self. It has brought me to a deeper level of self-awareness, one I am most grateful for.

When I sat with my MacBook to type my last blog, I never imagined it would generate the kind of attention it did and continues to. I have one last thing to say on this issue before I lay it to rest and move on. (I also hope others can move on too, we have too much going on in this Country to continue to peddle one for longer
than necessary.)

A very big thank you to everyone that has felt it necessary to talk about this issue and spread it throughout Nigeria and the foreign scene. I read every email sent to me with awe that people would take the time out to reach a total stranger like me. Some were cursing, calling me a witch from the pit of hell sent to destroy the church as though one individual/church is bigger than the body of Christ. As though God is mere man and would cringe in heaven saying, “Ese don did it this time.” Or as if the good Book didn’t state clearly that ALL things work out for good for those that love God.

Do you love God? If yes, trust that it will ALL turn around for good.

Some people say, ‘I support you, you are brave and courageous’ and I wonder if those terms really define me. I do not think I am brave or courageous. I do know, however that after decades of sleepwalking through life, I am now becoming aware not just of myself but also of my environment, my world, and the universe.

Some say, put out the evidence and we will believe you. Hmmm, the morning I sat to write that post, I really didn’t expect anyone to believe me. Well, apart from those involved. And my motive was simple, let one more woman be spared. Let one more minister of the gospel be mindful and let the church rise up to its responsibilities as God’s legal representatives here in the earth realm. n

A copy of the ‘evidence’ is with a respected minister of the gospel should the christian body decide to deal with this issue now and that becomes needful. I am not looking to have a ‘me against them’ case where I need to prove I’m right and someone is wrong. I am far from right, but I have used the only means available to me to free myself of the bondage I put myself in.

Lastly, to all the media people seeking interviews and whatever else mailing me, I have nothing more to say on this issue. I cannot reply every email as reading them is beginning to seem like a new job.

I remember asking a friend once while reading the book of Acts, “Why do we no longer operate in the power the disciples did in Jesus day?” What has changed? How do we ‘unchange’ it?

God is not mocked, if we serve Him, let’s serve Him. We cannot continue to grow as a Nation by oppressing, delaying justice, hating, having the ME ME ME mentality. As Martin Luther King Jr said, ‘no one is free until we are all free.’

Things have got to change and it begins with us. It begins with each and every one of us borrowing courage to stand for what we believe in. Fela Durotoye once said, ‘that thing that annoys you most in society is a sign that you carry its solution.’ (I’m paraphrasing)

Nothing has called out to me more than people, especially women, suffering in some way and hiding the pain. Whatever we cover doesn’t go away. It grows and it finds different outlets to rear its ugly head until we deal with it.

I am not perfect, I will never be, but I am enough to try what I feel might work. I don’t know what the entire bible says but I am learning and applying the little I find outdaily. And I think everyone owes it to himself or herself to figure it out forthemselves.

At the end of the day, we agree that ‘men of God’ are firstly men, right? This means it’s needless expecting them to help you in your growth with God. I fell into that trap of thinking a ‘man of God’ is equated to God and it is not new to find people fall in that hole.

How do you begin to learn to serve a God you have never seen? It takes another level of faith to do that but we live in a generation/Country where people don’t want to study for themselves. They don’t want to read the Scriptures. Well, they don’t want to read, period. They want to pursue things instead and have somebody do the praying and studying for them. If you fall in that category, you need to repent.

I learnt that when the veil was torn, we all were given equal access to the Father. No matter how long you may have been in church, if you don’t know what that means you better ask somebody. And seek a real relationship with the God you claim to serve.

That is what I am spending most of my time doing these days. Praying, studying, seeking, knocking. The peace I have felt despite all the hate mails and tantrums shows that God is not angry with me and I did what I needed to do to the best of myunderstanding.

My apologies to everyone this has affected in one way or another.

Firstly, my family: I don’t know how you guys aren’t sick of me yet ;)

Secondly, ‘the body of Christ,’ my intention was never to cause trouble but to stop a rot I felt might spread and become worse if nobody spoke up about it.

Lastly, to those who said I shouldn’t blog again, I respect and understand your concerns but the truth is, writing is not just my gift, it is also my ‘curse’. I cannot ‘NOT’ write but I PROMISE, this is the last I will say on this issue except the christian body needs to see me.

God is building His church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. No sin is too big to wreck anyone’s faith. If it does, then it means it’s working out a greater good for you. You will definitely come out stronger and better in the end. Like my best friend says “in the end, it will be all right and if it ain’t alright, it’s not the end.”

“…forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.” Paul.

Cheers to the weekend people :D
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Shocker! UNILAG Babe Kidnapped And Ra-ped By Three Friends (Must Read)

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 Police Arraign Three For Kidnapping, Raping UNILAG Student, 22-year-old female student of the University of Lagos, Tolulope Titiloye, who was kidnapped and raped by three friends, who later posted her nude photos on the social media, is now in court to get justice.
Three friends - Bashorun Babajide, Aje Olumayowa, and Babajide Ajayi - had molested her, took photos of her without clothes and threatened to share the photos if she exposed them. Tolulope had kept quiet about the sad incident but trouble started when her family members saw her nude photos on the internet.

Within few days of the upload, the nude photographs went viral on social media, exposing Tolulope to ridicule and shame.

Consequently, the three bad guys were rounded up and arrested. They have been arraigned before the Tinubu Magistrate’s Court, Lagos State, for kidnapping and raping.

According to police, after assaulting her, Babajide, Mayowa and Ajayi also attempted to murder Tolulope on the day of the incident in April, 2013.

Hence, they were arraigned for kidnap, rape, assault, battery, unlawful detention and attempted murder. When the charges were read to them, the three friends pleaded not guilty.

Magistrate S.K Matepo granted them bail in the sum of N100,000 with two sureties each and adjourned the case till October 2 for hearing.


Source punchng.com
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Drama and pandemonium as female passenger causes panic aboard Aero flight to Benin

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Passengers were Friday thrown into confusion aboard an Aero Contractors aircraft scheduled to take-off from Lagos to Benin as one of the female passengers started screaming on top of her voice that she was no longer travelling, thus causing panic onboard.

The passenger’s strange behaviour is coming barely one week after a teenage boy, Daniel Ohikena caused scare at the airport when he stowed away on Arik Air plane from Benin to Lagos.


The female passenger whose identity could not be ascertained at press time was said to have been ignored by members of cabin crew and passengers alike but her persistence led to suspicion among the passengers.

An eye-witness who confided in NE said that the female passenger after boarding the flight screamed on top of her voice that she was no longer willing to travel with the plane.

The strange behaviour, however led to the delay of the Benin- bound aircraft for two hours as all the passengers were asked to disembark while the plane was screened again.

NE further gathered that all the checked-in luggage were also off-loaded for proper screening by both Aero and Aviation Security, AVSEC, of the Federal Airports authority of Nigeria, FAAN.

But despite the re-screening of the already checked in passengers and their luggage, nothing suspicious was found on board.

It was also learnt that the passenger was handed over to security agents by AVSEC while the other passengers proceeded on the journey to Benin.

According to the source, “All passengers were already onboard and the pilot was preparing to take off before the woman started the strange behaviour.

“At first, no one took her seriously, but when the shouting and soliloquy continued, the passengers became apprehensive and ordered the pilot to abort the flight.

”The situation was not funny at all. In fact, the woman was speaking in a language which no one understood. But I can tell you authoritatively that all the passengers have been taken to Benin with the same aircraft and they landed in the airport safely.

”This was not the first time such an incident would be happening. In fact, it is common among first time travellers but no one knows the motive behind this act. However, I believe the security agents will do their work and reveal what led to the strange behaviour.”
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Drama as newborn baby dies after stepmother’s visit

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In Tarauni local government area of Kano State, two women married to the same husband are trading blames after a newborn baby died few minutes after a visit by her stepmother. NE reports

The joy experienced by Sadiya Hassan of Darmanawa in Tarauni local government area of Kano state after successfully giving birth to a baby girl was shattered when the baby died minutes after her estranged co-wife, Binta allegedly visited her.


NE reports that the women are married to one Salisu Haruna, a tanker driver with a popular filling station in Kano state. The two housewives were living together with their husband until a brawl broke out between them, weeks before Sadiya gave birth.

Neighbours said the husband returned the two women to their parents but that week, he allowed the youngest wife, Binta to return to his house. 

“While the senior wife Sadiya was living with her parents, her children were staying with their father and step mother. The situation of the family was like that until when Sadiya gave birth to her baby penultimate Wednesday. Their husband did not divorce them, he only returned them to their parents,” a woman said.

Our correspondent gathered that 24 hours after Sadiya gave birth, her co-wife Binta went to visit her and less than 20 minutes after carrying the baby, the infant gave up the ghost in a mysterious circumstances.

Binta, a 21-year-old mother of one, is now in custody at the Tarauni Divisional Police Station in Kano State for allegedly killing the baby.

Speaking to our correspondent, Sadiya alleged that her co-wife used a sharp object to stab the baby on her stomach during her visit.

“We were no longer together because of the scuffle we had and that was why I was surprised when she came to visit me a day after I gave birth to my baby. When she came she was restless, she carried the baby and was going up and down. Later she told me that her money was missing that I should get her torchlight to illuminate the compound. We gave her the torchlight but no money was found.

“My co-wife left with my younger sister and my baby. Few minutes later, my baby was returned by my son and she was breathing abnormally. When I examined her, I discovered cuts on her tummy and other parts of her body. She died few minutes after,” she said.

In an interview with newsmen, Amina, Sadiya’s younger sister, said Binta collected the baby from her and put her under the hijab she wore.

“When my boyfriend came he insisted that I should bring my sister’s new baby for him to see. I went inside to bring her. While I was with my boyfriend, Binta, my sisters’ co-wife, came and collected the baby from me. She put the baby under her hijab, I did not say anything because I taught she put her there because of the cold weather.

“About 10 minutes later, she came back and started limping and rushing. She told me that the baby gave her problem. When I asked her how, she told me that she fell down while trying to climb the pavement. She then gave the baby to my nephew and she asked him to return her back to their mother,” she said.

She said shortly after Binta left, her sister called and informed her that the baby was no longer breathing.
“She killed the baby because when she put the baby under her hijab I saw her pressing something. I suspect it was at that time she used a sharp object to cut her,” Amina alleged.

However, while speaking to our correspondent, Binta denied killing the baby, saying her co-wife and her relations were only trying to set her up.

“Yes I went to greet her after seeking our husband’s consent. Even if we were fighting that does not mean I should not rejoice with her when she puts to bed. When I collected the baby from her sister and I was returning her to my co-wife I fell down on my way. The baby was crying and I gave her to her elder brother. He was the one that took her to their mother. I don’t know whether the baby sustained any injury when we fell down,” she said.

Spokesperson of the Kano State Police Command, Assistant Superintendent Magaji Musa Majia, confirmed the incident and said that preliminary investigation into the matter has commenced.

“The suspect is claiming that she fell down with the baby but careful examination proves contrary. The late baby had five injuries on her but the suspect had none on her body. We are waiting for the medical report in order to advance our investigation,” he said in a telephone chat.

After preliminary investigation, he said, they will transfer the case to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for further action.

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BREAKING NEWS: BBATheChase Beverly Osu Hospitalized [DETAILS]

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Many do not know, but Nigeria's Big Brother Africa, BBA, representative in the 2013 edition of the reality show, Beverly Osu has not been feeling well since the last day of the show in South Africa.

According to NET, Beverly was said to have sustained an ankle injury on the finale of the reality show while climbing the stage and I hear the situation was getting more serious than she had thought.
Beverly who returned on Tuesday night was admitted on Wednesday at FaithCity Hospital, Oju Olobun Close, off Bishop Oluwole Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

She is said to be responding to treatment. Fellow housemate Melvin and Uti Nwachukwu were some of the first people to visit her in the hospital.
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Drug issue separates Odom from Khloe Kardashian

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As speculation over Lamar Odom’s alleged drug abuse continues to intensify, it has been reported that Khloe Kardashian has separated from the basketball star.

US website TMZ has claimed that the couple are living apart and have effectively ‘split’ after the reality star threw her husband out of the house.

 
In the wake of the reports, Khloe has vented on Twitter, saying: “Really hard to sit here and listen to people talk s*** about my family! F*** you and shame on you! I’m too protective for this s***!”
While it’s believed that neither of them has actually contacted a divorce lawyer, they are now allegedly ‘separated’, according to the website.
TMZ claims that people close to the NBA star have been unable to find or contact him for days, although a representative for the star has denied this.
The couple have been subject to persistent rumours that their marriage is in trouble after Lamar, 33, allegedly cheated on Khloe, 29, with two different women.
But several sources have told TMZ the real reason behind their marriage crisis is that Khloe reportedly believes that her husband has a drug problem.
Earlier this week the Kardashian family allegedly staged an intervention to convince Lamar to return to rehab, but he refused, reports the gossip website.
Khloe urged Lamar in August 2012 to go to rehab and after he entered a San Diego facility she hired private investigators to make sure he did not leave.
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BREAKING NEWS: BBATheChase Beverly Osu Hospitalized [DETAILS]

Posted on No comments






Many do not know, but Nigeria's Big Brother Africa, BBA, representative in the 2013 edition of the reality show, Beverly Osu has not been feeling well since the last day of the show in South Africa.

According to NET, Beverly was said to have sustained an ankle injury on the finale of the reality show while climbing the stage and I hear the situation was getting more serious than she had thought.
Beverly who returned on Tuesday night was admitted on Wednesday at FaithCity Hospital, Oju Olobun Close, off Bishop Oluwole Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

She is said to be responding to treatment. Fellow housemate Melvin and Uti Nwachukwu were some of the first people to visit her in the hospital.
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My Husband Proposed To Me When I Was 18-Years-Old -READ Omotola Jalade full interview

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Read the full interview of Omotola's Sunday Telegraph's Stella Magazine feature Read below:

Omosexy': The biggest film star you’ve never heard of Omotola Jalade Ekeinde, aka 'Omosexy’, is the queen of Nollywood. She’s appeared in more than 300 films, pulls in 150 million viewers for her reality-television show and has been named one of the 100 most influential people in the world.

She scores a zero on the Hollywood Richter scale. She has never starred in a major motion picture. Her most recent film, Last Flight to Abuja, means nothing to devotees of Netflix and LoveFilm.

When she sat next to Steven Spielberg at a Time magazine dinner earlier this year he didn’t know her name. Yet Omotola Jalade Ekeinde was attending that dinner because, like him, she had been honoured in Time’s 2013 list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World.

Alongside Kate Middleton, Michelle Obama and Beyoncé.The star of more than 300 films, Omotola – or “Omosexy”, as she is known to her legions of fans – is bigger across the African diaspora than Halle Berry.

Her reality-television show, Omotola: The Real Me, pulls in more viewers than Oprah’s and Tyra’s at their peak, combined, and she is the first African celebrity ever to amass more than one million Facebook “likes”.

When I meet her for the interview in a photographic studio in south-east London she is still recovering from getting mobbed by her Afro-Caribbean fan base in a nearby Tesco. “They practically had to shut down the store when people recognised me,” she says. “I actually got scared.”

Omotola is one of the biggest stars in Nollywood, the low-budget, high-output Nigerian film industry that churns out more English-language films than Hollywood or Bollywood (1,000-2,000 a year). Some have cinematic releases, but most are for the straight-to-video market.

When I watch her Stella photo-shoot from the sidelines it is immediately apparent that everything about her is BIG. Big body, big hair, big personality, big laugh: she comes across like Oprah’s sister.

She is here with her own film crew, who are recording for a future episode of her television show. Which means there is also a big, superstar delay – three hours – before our interview can start.

Many of her fans think her real name is “Omosexy”, she tells me, laughing, when we finally get to speak, but it was a nickname given to her by her husband, an airline pilot.

“He bought me a car back in 2009, and that was the plate number,” she recalls, speaking with kinetic, girlish excitement, rattling off sentences in fast, extended flurries.

"All my cars have special plate numbers, like Omotola 1.” When I ask how many cars she has, she laughs again, with embarrassment. “A few.” When she first saw her personalised licence plate she was horrified. “I thought, 'Oh no!’ It sounded cocky.

As if I was telling everybody, 'I’m sexy!’ Y’know-wha-I-mean?” She punctuates her sentences with this phrase, which she reels off as a single word.

The 35-year-old star has been acting since she was 16. Most recently she starred as Suzie, a passenger freshly spurned by her adulterous lover, in an aeroplane disaster movie, Last Flight to Abuja, which was the highest grossing film at the African box office last year.

Her breakthrough role came in 1995, in the Nollywood classic Mortal Inheritance, in which she played a sickle-cell patient fighting for her life. Since then she has established a staggering average of 16 films a year.

I put it to her that she must be the most prolific actress in the world. She laughs and shakes her head. “I am sure there are people who have beaten that record in Nigeria. Trust me.

It is easy to turn around with straight-to-video movies. It is the fashion to shoot until you drop, night and day. You have to remember that we are on very low budgets, so there is no time to wait.”

Nollywood began fewer than 20 years ago on the bustling streets of Lagos. Its pioneers were traders and bootleggers who started out selling copies of Hollywood films before graduating into producing their own titles as an inexpensive way to procure more content for a burgeoning market.

The traders finance the films (the average budget is £15,000-£30,000), then sell copies in bulk to local operators, who distribute them in markets, shops and street-corners for as little as £2 each.


The financial equation is problematic, with endemic piracy, issues over copyright and a lack of legally binding contracts.
Even so, what started as a ramshackle business is today worth an estimated £320 million a year, and rising. All this in a country that still lacks a reliable electricity supply.

What is the secret of Omotola’s appeal? “I don’t know,” she says, shrugging. “I wish someone would tell me! People can relate to me, I suppose. They feel as if they know me. A lot of my audience has grown up with me.”

At the same time, in a country that is heavily defined by religion and tradition, it helps that she is seen as a stable role model – a God-fearing woman who has been married to the same man for 17 years, and balances her work-life with bringing up four children.
Omotola Jalade Ekeinde was born into a middle-class family of strict Methodists in Lagos. Her father was the manager of the Lagos Country Club, while her mother worked for a local supermarket chain.

She has two younger brothers and was a tomboy, fiercely independent. “I used to scare boys from a very young age. They found me too much, because I knew what I wanted and I’d boss them around. In those days my mother would joke that I would never find a husband.”

As a child she was closest to her father. “He was a different kind of African man,” she recalls.

“He was very enlightened. He always asked me what I wanted, and encouraged me to speak up. He treated me like a boy.” He died in a car accident when Omotola was 12, while she was away at boarding-school.

“I didn’t grieve,” she says. “When I got home people were telling me that my mother had been crying for days, and that, as the eldest, I had to be strong for her and my brothers. I didn’t know what to do, so I just bottled everything up.
It affected me for many years afterwards. I was always very angry.”

Omotola would later play out her repressed grief on camera, using it as an emotional trigger to make herself cry whenever scripts called for it. But this soon created other problems.

“The director would shout, 'Cut!’ and I’d still be crying,” she recalls. “I could bring the tears, but I could not control them. In the end I had to stop using that technique.”

At the age of 16 Omotola met her future husband, Matthew Ekeinde, then 26, in church. He was so keen on her that the day after their first meeting he showed up at her house unannounced.

“He soon became a friend of the family. He was almost like a father figure,” she says. “He’d drop my brothers at school and stuff.”

Ekeinde proposed when Omotola was 18. Initially, Omotola’s mother thought her daughter too young to marry, and asked Matthew to wait, but he refused. “She was really shocked,” says Omotola.

“She said, 'If you want something badly enough you wait for it,’ but he said, 'If I want something I take it.’ He was very, very bold. It was one of the things I found fascinating about him.”

They had two wedding ceremonies, the second of which took place on a flight from Lagos to Benin. “He’s amazing. If I weren't married to him I couldn’t see myself with anybody else. I’m a handful.”

Ekeinde has become a reluctant poster boy for a new kind of African man.

“A lot of men come up to him and say, 'You’re a real man – I can’t believe how you deal with it all.’ He also gets a lot of invitations from various bodies to speak about how he copes as a modern Nigerian man in a relationship with a powerful working woman.”
Omotola’s ascent to the Nollywood elite began the same year she met Ekeinde. She was modelling at the time. One afternoon she tagged along with a model friend who was attending a film audition.

“She didn’t get the part, and she came out and was very sad,” says Omotola. “Then she said, 'Why don’t you go in and have a go?’
I said 'OK,’ and went in and got the part. My friend wasn’t happy. That was the end of our friendship.”

Omotola has somehow also found the time to release three albums. And then there is her charitable work. “First and foremost I actually consider myself a humanitarian,” she says proudly.

She started in 2005, working with the United Nations as a World Food Programme ambassador. She now has her own foundation, the Omotola Youth Empowerment Programme.

“I have a lot of young people writing to me, feeling disillusioned. There’s so much injustice in Africa, and people’s lives being trampled on. The foundation was designed to give voice to these people.”

Her own voice has been greatly enhanced by the success of her reality-television show. It is the first show of its kind in Africa, watched by 150 million people across the continent. “

A lot of women say to me that I am their role model and example. They say, 'If Omotola can do it, I can do it.’ I also get a lot of fan letters from men that say, 'You are the reason I allow my wife to work, or pursue a career,’ because they see that I am married and that I am doing both.”

Omotola is now one of the most powerful people in what’s being called the “new Nollywood”, a fresh chapter for the industry, characterised by better scripts, improved production values and cinema rather than DVD-only releases.

But there are obstacles for the new Nollywood, not least the fact that Nigeria only has seven major cinemas, and that ticket prices are way beyond the reach of most citizens.

Nollywood’s biggest problem by far, however, is that its films – including Omotola’s – are still not very good. Theirs is a fuzzy, low-budget aesthetic in which histrionic acting combines with often ludicrous plot lines.

The films drown in melodrama, and many scenes are unintentionally comic. Production values and the rigours of plot and character development are dispensed with in the mad rush to complete and distribute.

It’s akin to half-cooking food to feed impatient mouths, and the results feel like first drafts. Nevertheless, African audiences don’t seem to care, as long as the films are cheap enough for a downtrodden public desperate for escapism, and they feature their own home-grown stars on screen.

So, what does the future hold for Omotola?

She recently made her American debut, in a television drama, Hit the Floor, opposite the R&B star Akon. Does she see her future as Nollywood or Hollywood?

“I’ll just go with the flow. We [in Nollywood] want to collaborate, we don’t want to leave. We are hoping to be the first film industry that will pull Hollywood in, instead of them pulling us out.”

This may not be such a crazy idea, as Hollywood sees the amounts invested in Nollywood, plus a potential audience of over one billion Africans (155 million in Nigeria alone).

Would she like to work with Spielberg? “Oh, please, let it be!” she says, clasping her hands together hopefully.

“Please! Everything happens for a reason.” I ask her if she took Spielberg’s number at that Time dinner. “Hello? I wouldn’t be African if I didn’t, now would I?”

By Ben Arogundade.
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Sitting on a ‘Bomb’: Fuel scooped from a well in a residential area in Lagos

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Sitting on ‘Bomb’

LONG before last week, residents of Tunde Alabi Street and its adjoining areas in Ejigbo, a surbub of Lagos in the Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), had lived in peace, unaware of the danger waiting to explode around their homes.

But the peace in the neighbourhood was shattered after the discovery of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly known as petrol, in some wells in the area. Even before the dust generated by the discovery could settle down, another hail of fresh dust was raised on Tuesday, August 27, 2013, when a troop of armed and stern looking security men, comprising soldiers and men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), stormed the area in search of homes with large deposits of petroleum in their wells in the sleepy community.

Some of the bewildered residents stood in groups, discussing the strange find, while some others peeped from their windows as they watched in amazement as the security men combed suspected buildings in the area. Their countenance showed that they had never seen such a large number of armed security men in the community.
From the entrance of one of the streets, Animatu Ilo, to every nook and cranny of the community, the security men stood combat-ready at strategic positions in their numbers, as if on a mission to quell a boisterous ethnic clash.
Virtually all the raided houses were said to have large deposits of refined petroleum not mixed with water in their wells.
However, the house owners claimed ignorance of the development. Most them claimed that they had locked up the wells for periods ranging between six and seven years, and switched to boreholes after discovering that water from the wells were not good enough for human consumption. They said they were not aware that the wells had turned to large deposits of petroleum product after they locked and stopped using them about six year ago.
One of the house owners, Mrs. Perpetua Nwosu, expressed surprise that such quantity of petrol was in her well inside the building, located at 8, Tunde Alabi Street. She said: “I don’t even know what to say. I don’t know what to say. I never knew I had been living with fuel. If I knew that there was fuel in this compound, my dear, I would have left the house. When I came in here about six to seven years ago, the first thing we feared was fuel. They dug fuel at this junction here. I never knew they were doing it until I came out around 6am and found that the smell of fuel was all over the place and there was smoke everywhere.
“My grandmother was with me then, so I had to pack out for one week. Throughout that period, I didn’t come close to this area. I have closed the well for the past six years. Today is my first day that I would open that well since I dug it six years ago. When I opened it, the security agents said they wanted to fetch the water and I gave them a fetching pail to do so. What they brought out was pure fuel. It is my compound. They did not bring out any water. It was pure fuel. I never knew.

“I dug the well before I moved in here because it was the water that we used for building the house. But there was no fuel in it then. It was purely water. Why I dug this borehole was because I discovered that the well was smelling, as if contaminated by fuel. When I observed that, I locked it up and dug this borehole. I have not been using it for the past six years.”

Asked if she reported to anybody that the smell of fuel was coming from the well, she replied: “What I am telling you is that the moment I knew that it was smelling, I locked it up. But I didn’t know that the fuel was in large quantity. I am not the only one; the whole of this area’s wells are smelling. Nobody knew how the fuel went in and how to go about it. Then the next thing we did was to condemn this well. I thought that was the only way I could take care of the problem.

“Thereafter, I dug this borehole. I dug the borehole with the hope that if it was deeper, it would not smell, but after constructing the borehole, we still discovered that it was still smelling. I am not using it for cooking. I go out to get water that I use. If I knew that the fuel in the well was as much as the quantity they scooped out today, I would not have even been using it for bathing.”

The story was the same when the security operatives visited the building of one Alhaja Kudirat Lawal. She lives next door to Mrs. Nwosu at house No 10. A large deposit of refined petroleum product was also found in her well. She also denied the knowledge of the development. She said: “I don’t know what to say because when we came here seven years ago, we dug this well for our use. Suddenly, we observed that our bodies were reacting after using it to bathe. We, thereafter, locked it up on the instructions of my husband when the water was not fit for bathing or drinking. It was after that experience that we dug this borehole. We have not opened it for the past six years. When he was travelling about three days ago, I asked him for the key because law enforcement agents were around. But he didn’t know where he kept it, and he said they should break it on arrival. I was even joking with my children this morning that the water might even be gushing out because it had been long when we opened it.

“Many houses in this area have the same problem. We cannot drink our water. I believe the men were working on it before now. I am a woman; it is not everything that they discuss in their meetings that they will come back and tell me at home. We have been buying pure water for drinking in the house. We never opened the well since that period. We never knew that it contained a large deposit of fuel. I was equally surprised when they opened it. If this had not happened, we would not have known the solution to our problems.”

Admitting that it is hazardous to live in the area, she said: “We know that it is dangerous to our health. If anything should happen, the children and others in the house are not safe. If they want to blame us, it should be minimal because we were not aware of this quantity of fuel in the well. It is a problem for us and we have been panicking since it was found. I have started moving my belongings to another place because we are not safe in this area. It is that of the well that we have seen, what about the ground we are standing on? What do we know that is right there? If there should be a fire outbreak, the ground would also catch fire. Even as we are standing here, there is strong likelihood that we are standing on fuel. The environment is not safe for us to stay. If there is a solution for it, they should help us.

“They have picked up my sales girl. I am ready to submit myself to them so that they can allow the innocent girl to go. They held a meeting about this problem recently and planned to go to the NNPC to report. When we called our chairman earlier, he said they would go to the police station to report the problem. My husband was around at the time, and he advised he should go to the NNPC to complain because going to report to the police may not be the solution. That was the outcome of the meeting they had six days ago. Nobody would be happy to live in danger. I know what it took me to have my children. How would I be aware of this kind of a thing and happily keep them here? I have been thinking of relocating them immediately this revelation was made. I have made them to understand that they would not be returning to the house after closing from school because the house is not safe for them to live in. They should help us to proffer a solution to the problem.”
Commenting on the development, Mr. Jolaosho Taofeek, the Financial Secretary of the community, said: “We have contacted the NNPC on many occasions on this matter. If you look at the entrance of the street, you will see a pipeline. On many occasions, we had to call NNPC officials to come there for repairs. There were times we would wake up to see fuel coming out from the ground. It has been very terrible, and on many occasions, we have had reasons to tell residents not to make fire until the arrival of the NNPC officials. Immediately they arrive, they would do the repairs, but the problem persists. What we have seen is that there are many ruptures in the pipeline. Most of the pipelines were laid about 40 to 50 years ago. There is nothing like sabotage in our area here because we have security guards everywhere. It is a clear case of ruptures.

“They said that they abandoned the wells when they observed it was contaminated. You will find out that virtually all the affected houses have boreholes. They were forced to dig the boreholes because the wells were contaminated. The contamination is a general trend in the area.”

In a chat with our correspondents, the Deputy Commandant of the NSCDC in Lagos, Mr Fasiu Adeyinka, said they embarked on the raid after they were given privileged information about the large deposits of petrol in some wells located in the community. He maintained that his men are prepared to ensure the safety of Nigerians.

However, residents of Ejigbo are not alone in the problem of ruptured NNPC pipelines. Areas like Iyana Odo community, Pipeline and Diamond Estate, all in the Alimosho Local Government Area of Lagos State, are battling with the daily threat of fuel leak from NNPC pipelines.

For instance, danger was recently averted at Iyana Odo community when a pipeline suddenly burst, emptying its contents into the street, a short distance away from Peace Estate. A resident of the community, who gave his name as Comrade Popoola Musiliu, narrated how the residents narrowly escaped the havoc that the leakage would have wreaked.

He said: “About two months ago, we saw a liquid substance like petrol coming from the ground. When we noticed it, we quickly reported the development at the NSCDC office opposite us. They came and secured the area. NNPC officials later came and rectified the problem, but before the end of the day, it ruptured again. They later came back and fixed it again. We have not noticed any form of leakage since then.”
Prior to the incident, residents of Diamond Estate, a Federal Government Housing Estate, located in the area, had a similar challenge when their wells were found to be contaminated with fuel. For a long time, the residents lived under perpetual fear. They neither could make fire in their houses nor get good water for their daily use.

Though the problem has largely been put under control, the chairman of the estate, Mr. Akinsulire, said danger has not been totally averted.

Narrating how the problem started, he said: “The presence of fuel was found in the well in December 2010 when people started moving in here. We knew that to some extent, some other estates like Baruwa, Shagari had a similar experience in the 1990s. We didn’t notice ours until around November and December, 2010. Initially, when we moved into the estate, the water we had was clean. There was no mixture of any external product. But from that point that we had the pollution, as I would call it, we called on the NNPC and other government agencies. The NNPC at that point came and put some measures in place. They dug some trenches where they started evacuating this product over a long period of time. The problem is reducing, if you put it in percentage from the period we noticed it to this point we are, it has moved from 100 percent to about 20 percent. If you move around, you will still perceive smell of petrol in the estate, but it is not as strong as it was before.
“The explanation they gave us was that fuel vandals had tampered with pipelines over the years in the area and that was why it was so. Petrol has no oxygen, it can move over a long period of time. Like I said, the presence has reduced after the evacuation in this area because I cannot speak for other neighbouring places. It moved from one place to our area, but it has reduced after the evacuation but we don’t know what can happen between today and tomorrow, maybe it is going to move again because it has to do with the movement of the product.

“Initially, we started observing a disturbing smell of petroleum product all around the estate. At that point, we could not open our windows. If you went anywhere in the estate, you only needed to dig just about six inches or about one feet to get petroleum product. You only needed to dig just one foot and it would start gushing out in everybody’s house. It was so bad that majority of the residents could not even cook.

“It took a collective effort to survive the problem. There was mass awareness because we knew we had a big problem in our hands and collectively, we tackled it. The fact that we live in an enlightened environment really helped us to manage the challenge. The closest threat we had was when vandals went to the back of the fence to scoop oil and there was fire. They ran away but we invited fire fighters that saved the situation. Apart from that, we were able to manage the situation and can sleep now unlike before.

“The remaining 20 per cent is not specifically in one area. Before, it was highly concentrated around our Phase Two. It moved from that end to the lower end of Phase One. Some people still have the mixture of petrol in their water, but it is not as bad as it was much earlier. A lot of people still buy water. I buy water too. There is a very high content of lead in the water.”

The only solution, according to him, is for the “NNPC to remove the product from under our feet. That is all. Obviously an impact assessment was done before the estate was built, but it did not reveal the challenge at that point. It is the movement of the product from the previously contaminated area to this area over a period of time.
“There is only one body that is in charge of petroleum in the country. That is NNPC. When this problem started, they were the first people we called. When they came, they did their investigation and the evacuation and all that. Initially, they said they could not say the product was from them. They said they could be seepage from some petroleum companies in this area through their tank. We went through that over a period of time and another story later came in that it might be the pipeline that passes through.
“Whether it is the pipeline or whatever, the fact is that it is still the product of the NNPC. It is not a product that can be manufactured in anybody’s house and all we are saying is, remove this product from the ground. There should be a metre that monitors the movement of the product from the source to the destination. When I had a meeting with them, I asked them if from point A, I am giving 100 litres, when it gets to point B, it should be about 98 per cent, but when I lose about 20 or 30 per cent, didn’t they think something was amiss? What they said was that there might be some vandals tapping their pipeline. It is dangerous to live with it. When we noticed it, the first thing that came to our mind was our health and safety. If we could remember, we had the case of some Chinese that were scooping the product in their house. They were keeping it in their drums but were later arrested. The people in the estate rallied round and made sure that a situation like that never comes up again.”

The 16, May 2008 pipeline explosion in Ijegun community, a suburb of Lagos, readily comes to mind. The explosion took place after a bulldozer, working on a road construction project, accidentally struck an oil pipeline, leading to serious fireball that consumed many lives.

The Nation gathered that residents of the areas where NNPC pipelines pass through now live in constant fear, daily praying to God to spare them of a repeat of the 2008 Ijegun pipeline fire accident.

Meanwhile, officials of NNPC returned to Tunde Alabi and other streets affected by the strange find on Thursday to commence the evacuation of the fuel from the wells. According to Mr. Jolaosho Taofeek, Financial Secretary of the residents’ association, NNPC officials arrived the area early Thursday to commence work. “NNPC officials came this morning, and they have been going round to evacuate the fuel from the wells”, Taofeek disclosed.

However, efforts to speak with NNPC officials were futile, as they refused to comment on the matter. One of them, who refused to disclose his identity, said the team does not have the mandate to speak with the press.

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My Husband Proposed To Me When I Was 18-Years-Old -READ Omotola Jalade full interview

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Read the full interview of Omotola's Sunday Telegraph's Stella Magazine feature Read below:

Omosexy': The biggest film star you’ve never heard of Omotola Jalade Ekeinde, aka 'Omosexy’, is the queen of Nollywood. She’s appeared in more than 300 films, pulls in 150 million viewers for her reality-television show and has been named one of the 100 most influential people in the world.

She scores a zero on the Hollywood Richter scale. She has never starred in a major motion picture. Her most recent film, Last Flight to Abuja, means nothing to devotees of Netflix and LoveFilm.

When she sat next to Steven Spielberg at a Time magazine dinner earlier this year he didn’t know her name. Yet Omotola Jalade Ekeinde was attending that dinner because, like him, she had been honoured in Time’s 2013 list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World.

Alongside Kate Middleton, Michelle Obama and Beyoncé.The star of more than 300 films, Omotola – or “Omosexy”, as she is known to her legions of fans – is bigger across the African diaspora than Halle Berry.

Her reality-television show, Omotola: The Real Me, pulls in more viewers than Oprah’s and Tyra’s at their peak, combined, and she is the first African celebrity ever to amass more than one million Facebook “likes”.

When I meet her for the interview in a photographic studio in south-east London she is still recovering from getting mobbed by her Afro-Caribbean fan base in a nearby Tesco. “They practically had to shut down the store when people recognised me,” she says. “I actually got scared.”

Omotola is one of the biggest stars in Nollywood, the low-budget, high-output Nigerian film industry that churns out more English-language films than Hollywood or Bollywood (1,000-2,000 a year). Some have cinematic releases, but most are for the straight-to-video market.

When I watch her Stella photo-shoot from the sidelines it is immediately apparent that everything about her is BIG. Big body, big hair, big personality, big laugh: she comes across like Oprah’s sister.

She is here with her own film crew, who are recording for a future episode of her television show. Which means there is also a big, superstar delay – three hours – before our interview can start.

Many of her fans think her real name is “Omosexy”, she tells me, laughing, when we finally get to speak, but it was a nickname given to her by her husband, an airline pilot.

“He bought me a car back in 2009, and that was the plate number,” she recalls, speaking with kinetic, girlish excitement, rattling off sentences in fast, extended flurries.

"All my cars have special plate numbers, like Omotola 1.” When I ask how many cars she has, she laughs again, with embarrassment. “A few.” When she first saw her personalised licence plate she was horrified. “I thought, 'Oh no!’ It sounded cocky.

As if I was telling everybody, 'I’m sexy!’ Y’know-wha-I-mean?” She punctuates her sentences with this phrase, which she reels off as a single word.

The 35-year-old star has been acting since she was 16. Most recently she starred as Suzie, a passenger freshly spurned by her adulterous lover, in an aeroplane disaster movie, Last Flight to Abuja, which was the highest grossing film at the African box office last year.

Her breakthrough role came in 1995, in the Nollywood classic Mortal Inheritance, in which she played a sickle-cell patient fighting for her life. Since then she has established a staggering average of 16 films a year.

I put it to her that she must be the most prolific actress in the world. She laughs and shakes her head. “I am sure there are people who have beaten that record in Nigeria. Trust me.

It is easy to turn around with straight-to-video movies. It is the fashion to shoot until you drop, night and day. You have to remember that we are on very low budgets, so there is no time to wait.”

Nollywood began fewer than 20 years ago on the bustling streets of Lagos. Its pioneers were traders and bootleggers who started out selling copies of Hollywood films before graduating into producing their own titles as an inexpensive way to procure more content for a burgeoning market.

The traders finance the films (the average budget is £15,000-£30,000), then sell copies in bulk to local operators, who distribute them in markets, shops and street-corners for as little as £2 each.


The financial equation is problematic, with endemic piracy, issues over copyright and a lack of legally binding contracts.
Even so, what started as a ramshackle business is today worth an estimated £320 million a year, and rising. All this in a country that still lacks a reliable electricity supply.

What is the secret of Omotola’s appeal? “I don’t know,” she says, shrugging. “I wish someone would tell me! People can relate to me, I suppose. They feel as if they know me. A lot of my audience has grown up with me.”

At the same time, in a country that is heavily defined by religion and tradition, it helps that she is seen as a stable role model – a God-fearing woman who has been married to the same man for 17 years, and balances her work-life with bringing up four children.
Omotola Jalade Ekeinde was born into a middle-class family of strict Methodists in Lagos. Her father was the manager of the Lagos Country Club, while her mother worked for a local supermarket chain.

She has two younger brothers and was a tomboy, fiercely independent. “I used to scare boys from a very young age. They found me too much, because I knew what I wanted and I’d boss them around. In those days my mother would joke that I would never find a husband.”

As a child she was closest to her father. “He was a different kind of African man,” she recalls.

“He was very enlightened. He always asked me what I wanted, and encouraged me to speak up. He treated me like a boy.” He died in a car accident when Omotola was 12, while she was away at boarding-school.

“I didn’t grieve,” she says. “When I got home people were telling me that my mother had been crying for days, and that, as the eldest, I had to be strong for her and my brothers. I didn’t know what to do, so I just bottled everything up.
It affected me for many years afterwards. I was always very angry.”

Omotola would later play out her repressed grief on camera, using it as an emotional trigger to make herself cry whenever scripts called for it. But this soon created other problems.

“The director would shout, 'Cut!’ and I’d still be crying,” she recalls. “I could bring the tears, but I could not control them. In the end I had to stop using that technique.”

At the age of 16 Omotola met her future husband, Matthew Ekeinde, then 26, in church. He was so keen on her that the day after their first meeting he showed up at her house unannounced.

“He soon became a friend of the family. He was almost like a father figure,” she says. “He’d drop my brothers at school and stuff.”

Ekeinde proposed when Omotola was 18. Initially, Omotola’s mother thought her daughter too young to marry, and asked Matthew to wait, but he refused. “She was really shocked,” says Omotola.

“She said, 'If you want something badly enough you wait for it,’ but he said, 'If I want something I take it.’ He was very, very bold. It was one of the things I found fascinating about him.”

They had two wedding ceremonies, the second of which took place on a flight from Lagos to Benin. “He’s amazing. If I weren't married to him I couldn’t see myself with anybody else. I’m a handful.”

Ekeinde has become a reluctant poster boy for a new kind of African man.

“A lot of men come up to him and say, 'You’re a real man – I can’t believe how you deal with it all.’ He also gets a lot of invitations from various bodies to speak about how he copes as a modern Nigerian man in a relationship with a powerful working woman.”
Omotola’s ascent to the Nollywood elite began the same year she met Ekeinde. She was modelling at the time. One afternoon she tagged along with a model friend who was attending a film audition.

“She didn’t get the part, and she came out and was very sad,” says Omotola. “Then she said, 'Why don’t you go in and have a go?’
I said 'OK,’ and went in and got the part. My friend wasn’t happy. That was the end of our friendship.”

Omotola has somehow also found the time to release three albums. And then there is her charitable work. “First and foremost I actually consider myself a humanitarian,” she says proudly.

She started in 2005, working with the United Nations as a World Food Programme ambassador. She now has her own foundation, the Omotola Youth Empowerment Programme.

“I have a lot of young people writing to me, feeling disillusioned. There’s so much injustice in Africa, and people’s lives being trampled on. The foundation was designed to give voice to these people.”

Her own voice has been greatly enhanced by the success of her reality-television show. It is the first show of its kind in Africa, watched by 150 million people across the continent. “

A lot of women say to me that I am their role model and example. They say, 'If Omotola can do it, I can do it.’ I also get a lot of fan letters from men that say, 'You are the reason I allow my wife to work, or pursue a career,’ because they see that I am married and that I am doing both.”

Omotola is now one of the most powerful people in what’s being called the “new Nollywood”, a fresh chapter for the industry, characterised by better scripts, improved production values and cinema rather than DVD-only releases.

But there are obstacles for the new Nollywood, not least the fact that Nigeria only has seven major cinemas, and that ticket prices are way beyond the reach of most citizens.

Nollywood’s biggest problem by far, however, is that its films – including Omotola’s – are still not very good. Theirs is a fuzzy, low-budget aesthetic in which histrionic acting combines with often ludicrous plot lines.

The films drown in melodrama, and many scenes are unintentionally comic. Production values and the rigours of plot and character development are dispensed with in the mad rush to complete and distribute.

It’s akin to half-cooking food to feed impatient mouths, and the results feel like first drafts. Nevertheless, African audiences don’t seem to care, as long as the films are cheap enough for a downtrodden public desperate for escapism, and they feature their own home-grown stars on screen.

So, what does the future hold for Omotola?

She recently made her American debut, in a television drama, Hit the Floor, opposite the R&B star Akon. Does she see her future as Nollywood or Hollywood?

“I’ll just go with the flow. We [in Nollywood] want to collaborate, we don’t want to leave. We are hoping to be the first film industry that will pull Hollywood in, instead of them pulling us out.”

This may not be such a crazy idea, as Hollywood sees the amounts invested in Nollywood, plus a potential audience of over one billion Africans (155 million in Nigeria alone).

Would she like to work with Spielberg? “Oh, please, let it be!” she says, clasping her hands together hopefully.

“Please! Everything happens for a reason.” I ask her if she took Spielberg’s number at that Time dinner. “Hello? I wouldn’t be African if I didn’t, now would I?”

By Ben Arogundade.
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REVEALED: Fertility clinics where Lagosians make money selling sperm for N50,000

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People get married for different reasons. While some seek companionship in marriage, many go into marriage for procreation.  For couples who look forward to having children immediately after marriage, being declared ‘infertile’ by experts is like a death sentence.


While it is generally agreed that it takes two to have a baby and every couple is expected to be in optimum health to have babies, medical experts claim men are having more fertility challenge now.  Sperm concentration in men is said to have decreased by a third since 1990s while sperm count is said to have decreased by half over the past 50 years.

 Studies are also showing genetic abnormalities in sperm particularly in older men. For men therefore, quantity, quality and motility of spermatozoa are seen as important factors in fertility.

 Since the male factor is a prominent cause of infertility in couples, sperm donation has become vital in assisted conception treatment.

A study by the Society for the Study of Male Reproduction stated that “a male factor is solely responsible in about 20 per cent of infertile couples and contributory in another 30 to 40 per cent.”

According to experts, even when sperm numbers are great, a high proportion of men may have DNA damage that significantly impairs the chances of natural conception. Besides, male sperm deteriorates with age the same way it does for women.

Studies have also shown that if a man has poor health, smokes, drinks too much or has a bad diet, it’s very likely his sperms are also going to be unhealthy.

Indeed, investigation by Saturday PUNCH showed that sperm has become a commodity in high demand in Lagos. The Chief Consultant and Head, Obstetrician and Fertility Department, Eko Hospitals, Dr. Adegbite Ogunmokun, said fertility problem, based on recent experience, had tilted more towards the male factor.

He said, “If 10 couples come in, there will be problem with the male in six of them, using our parameter of 20 million sperm per millimetre. But 10 to 15 years ago, maybe about four out of 10 men would have problem.”
 Our correspondents, who visited some fertility centres in Lagos, learnt that more men are having low sperm count, thus necessitating the need for more volunteer donors. But because donors are scare, fertility clinics offer as much as N50,000 to men who are interested in selling their sperm.

They also pay more when sellers have special features that the beneficiaries are looking for.

Like blood sellers, investigations show that many people in Lagos, especially students, now sell their sperms anytime they need money.

A student of the University of Lagos, who identified himself as John, said he had sold sperm to a few fertility centres in Lagos. John said he had been funding his education for the past two years with what he earned from selling his sperm.

John said he was introduced to the programme by a friend and that he had in turn brought in two other friends to ‘business’.

“I’ve sold to a number of fertility centres. The money has really helped me to stay in school. It takes care of my tuition and some other personal needs,” John said, with a measure of satisfaction.

“It’s cool money, really and I’m also doing a service to mankind by helping out some people in need. Even friends that I introduced to it have not turned back since then.”

An employee in a Lagos fertility clinic, who identified himself as Olufunsho, told Saturday PUNCH that some women would pay any amount to get a sperm seller with the features they want.

He said, “We pay N50,000 here but there are times when women come in and request that, at all cost, they must get a tall man. The person can earn more when they make such requests, especially if we don’t have any that fits the profile in our bank.

“There was a time a woman came and requested that we get a tall man for her at all cost. I showed her the samples we had, but she did not like the profile. She said she was not satisfied with the heights. And we were unable to get what she wanted from the sellers that came at the time.

“The sellers that came then were either AS, or positive with hepatitis B or had low sperm count. We had up to twelve sellers that came and we were unable to get anybody. In such cases, we could offer a lot more when we find the right person. Sometimes, such people are also in a position to negotiate for what they want.”

However, subsequent drops attract lesser amounts of money for the same seller.

 To sell sperm, the person, according to Olufunsho, must stay off sex for five days. He undergoes some tests to confirm that he is not HIV positive and that he also has healthy sperm among others.

He said, “If the same person is still interested and we still need him, he would repeat the screening process again. We pay N10, 000 per ejaculation for other subsequent ones. With my own discretion, if the quality of the sperm is good and we have somebody who needs something that matches perfectly with that seller, we may reduce the probation period, but the sperm must be very good.

“Although that is the protocol, it could always be amended when there is nothing wrong with the person. Even if someone ejaculates the first time and in twenty minutes time, he does the same, it is still going to be good, but not as good as the first one.”

At the various fertility centres where our correspondents posed as potential sperm seller, the clinic workers made keen attempts to have them start the process immediately, by leaving blood samples for tests.

On one occasion, a clinic worker told one of our correspondents that he was willing to waive the two to five days’ probation period of abstinence, after our correspondent said he wished to “sleep over it.”

The worker said, “What is there to think about? After all, you already said you’re not married. You can leave your blood sample for testing while you go ahead and think over it.”

Investigation showed that fertility centres want sellers between 18 and 45 years of age and expect them to abstain from sex, two to five days before giving sperm sample, depending on the centre.

Other conditions to be met by potential sperm sellers include testing negative to HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B and C, sickle cell and some other sexually transmitted diseases. Tests are also carried out to determine the count, morphology (shape) and motility of the sperm cells.

In addition, fertility centres claim to also place a high premium on average intelligence, education and lifestyle. Although, Saturday PUNCH learnt that such claims are not always true as more emphases are actually placed on height and other physical attributes.

“It is not immediately that we pay. We prefer AA genotype because it can be given to anybody, unlike AS that cannot be given to just anybody,” Olufunsho added.

However, an employee in another fertility clinic in Lagos, Akin, said sperm sellers could get paid within a week of starting the process. This is possible only if they satisfy the conditions.

He said, “If the motility is good, the count is good and you’re okay, then, you can produce for us. If everything is okay, within a week, you can get your money.”

A 2012 study into the reproductive health of 26,600 men in France, warned of a sperm crisis worldwide. It said that sperm concentration has decreased by a third since the 1990s. The study found a continuous 32.2 per cent decrease in sperm concentration over a period of 17 years.

During the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology annual conference in London in July 2013, some experts, critical of the study’s validity, said it did not completely represent the situation in certain areas, particularly the developing world.

However, a fertility expert at Mother’s World Care, Ikeja, Lagos, Dr. Margaret Olusegun, said the situation is similar in Nigeria.

She said, “A man should have a good count, up to 40 to 50 million sperm per millimetre of semen upward. But you find that these days, men have more challenges with fertility than women.

“Although, I don’t have the statistics, men are the ones with more challenges now, even though they are the ones who drive out their wives if they can’t bear children.”

Olusegun explained that good sperm should have “at least 50 per cent motility (activeness) because sperm cells can be active, sluggish or dead.”

“For morphology (shape) too, which could be normal or abnormal, sperm should have upward of 50 per cent normal cells. And there should not be bacteria growth,” she added.

Ogunmokun described low concentration of sperm as “Oligospermia.” He, however, said a sperm count with a minimum lower limit of 20 million sperm per millimetre of semen would still be considered normal. But he added that any sperm concentration of less than 20 million per millimetre of semen could be categorised as mild, moderate or severe oligospermia, depending on the count.

Ogunmokun said fertility problems could be with the man, the woman or the two of them.

Saturday PUNCH learnt that the demand for sperm has made the fertility business a lucrative one. Many of the fertility centres in Lagos have facilities for sperm preservation, where it’s freezing costs about N50, 000 per quarter.

 Ogunmokun said, “After collection, the semen is processed and seminal fluid and all other things are removed. The sperm is put in little bottles and placed in special containers called dewars, connected to a power source. It is stored at very low temperature and there must be an indicator for monitoring should there be a change in the condition.”

He, however, added that there must be a standby generator in a place like Nigeria, where power supply is unstable, as sperm can be frozen for decades.

“Although, there are many other reasons why people freeze sperm, someone living far away from his wife can decide to freeze his sperm for the wife’s use while he’s away. Also, someone going for cancer treatment can freeze his sperm before starting the treatment since such treatments affect sperm production,” he added.
 Ogunmokun said fertility centres focus more on university undergraduates to ensure that sperm donors have a certain degree of intelligence.

 He said, “The current practice is to actually recruit sperm donors and the focus is on undergraduates. The focus is on students because they should be able to provide their ID cards so that background checks can be done.”

 According to Ogunmokun, the perceived increase in the number of men with low sperm count is as a result of infection and lifestyle habits like sitting for too long and wearing of tight underwear.

 He said, “The testes are not supposed to be too close to the body because of the higher body temperature. The testes are naturally colder, so people who travel long distances or sit in traffic for long can be prone to infertility.”
Ogunmokun advised that men should “exercise appropriately, take good nutrition, avoid tight underwear, premarital sex, cigarette and alcohol to try to prevent low sperm count.”

 However, Olusegun identified good hygiene as key to the prevention of low sperm count, saying, “Our environment is too contaminated.”

 Additional report by Gbenro Adeoye
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