Thursday, 23 January 2014

8 months pregnant woman dies after killing her 3 children, jumping off roof!


A woman in the United Kingdom died of head injuries after killing her 3 children in an incident which has been described as unavoidable.
23-year-old Fiona Anderson was 8 months pregnant when she jumped off a storey building after drowning her 3 young children in her home.
The lifeless bodies of Levina, 3, Addy, 2, and 11-month-old Kyden were found after their mother’s and it has been revealed that Fiona was suffering from depression after being separated from the children’s father. The deaths of a heavily pregnant young mum who jumped from a car park and the three children she is believed to have killed could NOT have been prevented, an investigation has found. 
Officers found the bodies of Fiona Anderson’s tragic tots, Levina, three, Addy two, and a son aged 11 months at her flat after she plunged from the top floor of the nearby multi-storey building. Friends said the 23-year-old had been gripped by depression since splitting from their dad Craig McLelland and the day before the deaths she had posted a chilling message on Facebook warning she might harm them. One, who did not want to be named, said: 
“We heard she put a status on her Facebook page last night, saying, ‘My babies will go with me’. 
Officers later said they were not looking for anybody else in connection with the incident. Suffolk Local Safeguarding Children Board (LSCB) has today published its Serious Case Review into how public agencies worked with the Anderson family prior to the deaths. It found that attempts to engage with the family had failed but there were no warning signs to suggest the children were in immediate danger. Report author Ron Lock said: 
There had been no known history of either the mother or the father intentionally causing physical harm to the children, or of any self-harming episodes by the parents themselves. 
“In this respect, the deaths of the children and their mother were completely unexpected. It was not predictable or thought in any way likely.”

‘He said my private parts need deliverance’: Teenager narrates how a pastor raped and impregnated her!


A pastor’s sexual urges may have landed him in serious trouble with the Police.
Kingsley the pastor and general overseer of  Zion International Christian Church, Idah, Kogi State was allege to have slept with an 18-year-old girl identified as Mary after deceiving her into thinking she was possessed with demons which could only be exorcised through sex.
The pastor was said to have had carnal knowledge of the girl who is the daughter of his Sunday School teacher and according to the police, the suspect was arrested after the girl had refused to abort the pregnancy which belonged to the Pastor. 
According to the state Commissioner of Police, Seidu Madawaki who paraded the suspect before newsmen,  he said: 
After impregnating the girl, he attempted to abort the pregnancy by giving her some liquid substances mixed with olive oil which she refused to drink, he said. 
Speaking with Crime Watch, the victim said she came to join her parent from the village around November last year when the pastor spotted her in the church on the pretext that she had ‘a wild demonic spirit’ in her and then ordered her to see him after the church service for deliverance. Frightened, she said she went to meet the pastor immediately after the service. 
“He told me that my waist and private parts have been ravaged by demons and until deliverance was carried out, I may not be able to have any child in life.  
“The Man of God’ frightened me and said he would only cast out the demons from me through sexual intercourse but he warned me not to tell anybody on the mode of deliverance. 
“After praying into an olive oil, he asked me to undress while he rubbed my waist and private parts with the anointing oil mixed with some substances, he then undressed himself and used the same oil  on his private part before he descended on me and started to do the thing.” 
“But I discovered that I was pregnant last week when my mother noticed my conduct and I had to reveal everything to her even though he warned me not to tell anybody,” She revealed. 
However, the 37-year old pastor denied the allegation saying, that all he did was to cast out the demons in her, using the anointing oil. He said that some church members who were envious of his spiritual rise were the one who ganged up against him because his ministry was experiencing ‘exponential growth’ The CP warned parents to put more attention on their female children even in religious centres,  saying there are many fake pastors outside there.

Justin Bieber Arrested for Drag Racing, DUI in Miami Beach!


According to the Miami Police, Singer Justin Bieber was reportedly arrested early Thursday for drag racing and DUI in Miami Beach.
Embedded image permalink
The details of the arrest were unknown.
Bieber has been spotted in different places around town the past few days, including a Miami Beach skate shop in a photo posted on Instagram.
Justin Bieber, Jeremy Bieber

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Family seeking justice for a 14-year-old boy executed in 1944!


A 14-year-old black teenager executed by the state of South Carolina nearly 70 years ago received another day in court Tuesday. A hearing this week will determine whether a South Carolina circuit court judge could re-open the case and ultimately overturn a guilty verdict for the youngest person to be executed in the United States in the last century.

George Stinney Jr.

In March 1944, an all-white jury decided in under 10 minutes to convict 14-year-old George Stinney Jr. of murdering two white girls in Alcolu, S.C. Three months later, Stinney was sent to the electric chair. 

The decision to open a new trial rests on the shoulders of Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen. She clarified the purpose of the hearing in her opening remarks, saying that the trial will not determine whether Stinney was guilty or innocent but whether he received a fair trial. 
“What can I do? What can I rectify?” Mullen said Tuesday, the first day of the hearing. “And even if we did retry Mr. Stinney, what would be the result? Again, none of us have the power to bring that 14-year-old child back.
Most of the evidence, including Stinney’s confession and a transcript of the murder trial, has disappeared and Stinney’s lawyers and supporters have demanded justice for the boy, arguing that his conviction was clouded by racial discrimination. Lawyers working for Stinney’s family, who are leading the fight to exonerate the teenager, have presented new evidence, including sworn statements from his relatives and a pathologist refuting the autopsies of both girls.
“The trial lasted only one day. The lawyer didn’t ask any questions on cross-examination which is stipulated to by the state. They called no witnesses, and they offered little or no defense in this case,” Judge Mullen told the court. 11-year-old Betty June Binnicker and 7-year-old Mary Emma Thames were found, beaten, in a watery ditch beneath a bicycle path, according to a medical report. Hours later, police took Stinney into custody. 

Stinney’s younger sister, Amie Ruffner, who was 7 at the time, testified Tuesday and recounted how she hid in a chicken coop when several white officers arrived at their home. 
Ruffner told the court how she and her brother saw the two girls the day they died and that they were alive when she and George left them to tend to the family cow. 
“[The police] were looking for someone to blame it on, so they used my brother as a scapegoat,” Ruffner said.

Officers at the time claimed Stinney confessed to the murder, but there is no written record of it.

According to reports, Stinney’s trial lasted about 3 hours and the defense presented no witnesses, no physical evidence, and did not file an appeal. A jury was composed of 12 white men.

On June 16, 1944 the 95-pound Stinney was executed in the electric chair. Newspaper accounts, according to the AP, reported that the chair did not fit his body. 

Stinney’s body was buried in an unmarked grave. The hearing will continue Wednesday, and Judge Mullen must decide if Stinney’s guilty verdict will stand.

Genevieve Nnaji becomes an Etisalat Ambassador!

It's official....

Information reaching us now confirmed that our very own dear screen diva Genevieve Nnaji, has joined the band of Etisalat ambassadors for the #Easyflex.




Etisalat twits: 


We officially welcome as an Etisalat Ambassador for the . We do quality not quantity.

Woman Finds Out After Wedding That Hubby Was Already Married With 6 Kids!


Her wedding dress was elegant, her hair woven in an intricate style and her groom handsome in his suit. As Kirsten Evans beamed for the photographer and gazed at her husband Aman, it was all too easy to imagine this was a dream wedding.


Kirsten may have been in love with him for almost 15 years, but throughout all that time Aman had been concealing a terrible secret. He was still married to his first wife. and not only that, he had six children with her — four of them conceived while Kirsten and Aman had been a couple….married couple.

It’s a story of duplicity, deceit and emotional manipulation. Aman had been adept at covering his tracks, but slowly his web of lies began to disintegrate.

Kirsten was repelled by the thought of his physical and emotional infidelity, but there were cultural issues, too. She was a white, middle-class Christian who had long dreamed of a big wedding. Aman was a Muslim, as was his secret wife and family.

Aman was outwardly devout. He prayed five times a day, eschewed pork and alcohol and encouraged his vivacious blonde fiancee to stop wearing ‘revealing’ clothes and cover up. 

But all the while, it seems, he had distorted the principles of the Muslim faith, in which men are allowed more than one wife, providing they are treated fairly. Here was a man who was truly living a double life and the discovery of this almost broke Kirsten.

Brought up in Bridgend, she had a comfortable, sheltered childhood. She dreamed of nothing more than falling in love and having lots of children.
So, when handsome Aman crashed into her life after a chance meeting in a local club in September 1991, 17-year-old Kirsten was thrilled.

She admits she was intoxicated by the glamour of Mauritius-born Aman’s lifestyle. At the age of just 24, he owned a string of designer clothes shops.
Intelligent, charismatic and witty, before long he occupied her every waking thought.

Six months later, however, Aman dropped a bombshell: his religious parents had forced him into an arranged marriage when he was 18 to a 16-year-old called Zabeen. They were separated and had two sons aged two and three. 
 ‘He said his parents had pressured him into it, they were divorcing and he wanted to be with me,’ says Kirsten. ‘I was shocked, but believed him.’
Little did she know that, even as he told her this, Zabeen was pregnant with Aman’s third child.

It was at this time that he proposed to Kirsten. Naive and blinded by the overwhelming power of this first love affair, she accepted.

Unsurprisingly, her concerned parents warned her to stay away. Her company director father was particularly worried about the man his daughter had fallen so deeply for.

‘My father was so hurt. But he just said: “Be careful, Kirsten,” ’ she says. ‘My parents were wary about the fact he had a failed marriage and two children. 
'However, like any teenager, I was reluctant to listen. It pains me to say it, but Aman drove a wedge between my parents and me.’

So much so that shortly afterwards Kirsten moved out of her family home and into a rented property.

To gain Aman’s approval, she started to modify her behaviour: she stopped drinking alcohol and wore flowing dresses instead of pencil skirts.
‘I was tempted to convert to please him, but reluctant to lose my identity altogether,’ she says. ‘But no matter how hard I tried, it was never enough. 

'Aman told me I was fat and worthless, that I lacked discipline.’
Slowly, Kirsten became more and more isolated from her friends and family. ‘People tried to warn me, but I wouldn’t listen,’ she says.

Then she found out she was pregnant. Aged just 20, it was unplanned. Her parents were horrified.

‘They were so furious when I told them I was pregnant they didn’t speak to me for three months,’ she says.

And so, three years after she had met him, Kirsten had virtually no one left in her life who would tell her Aman’s behaviour was unacceptable.

The joy of her son’s birth in August 1994 soothed any misgivings she had. Enchanted by baby Zak, Aman and Kirsten found a new closeness.

Then came the first of many bombshells. One afternoon, as Kirsten held two-month-old Zak in her arms, the phone rang. It was Aman’s first wife, Zabeen.
Kirsten braced herself. They had spoken on the phone once before, but only in the most cursory way. However, nothing could have prepared her for what was to come next.

After a pause, Zabeen said simply: ‘Tell Aman I’ve just given birth to his baby girl.’ In fact, she was their fourth child.

‘I was dumbstruck,’ says Kirsten. ‘I started shaking violently, but tried desperately to keep calm. After all, I was holding little Zak in my arms.  Then Zabeen said “You don’t know, do you?” and I dropped the phone.’


What followed next was all too predictable. When she stopped crying, Kirsten packed her bags and left with Zak. Staying with a friend at first, she soon found a little house to rent nearby and tried to get over her heartbreak.
 .
Aman begged and pleaded for her to return and, for eight weeks, her resolve remained strong.

‘He would cry and cry, insisting the baby was the result of a one-night stand he’d had with Zabeen, who meant nothing to him, that it was me he wanted.
‘I know — every cliche in the book. I was so angry. But I was also vulnerable and alone. There’s no way I could cope with the baby without him. Besides, I wanted to believe him. I loved him.’

So Kirsten made the biggest — and some would say most foolish — decision of her life. She decided to go back to her cheating fiance. Years of emotional turmoil followed.

However, at first all was quiet. ‘Aman never mentioned his new baby with Zabeen and spent most of his time with me, though we hadn’t yet moved in together,’ says Kirsten.
‘He would bring his sons by Zabeen to see me all the time. I adored them.’
Yet he was reluctant to introduce his fiancee to the rest of his family. If they visited unexpectedly while she was at Aman’s home, he would make her run upstairs and hide in his bedroom until they had left.

Hurt, Kirsten assumed it was because she wasn’t Muslim and he was ashamed of her. The possibility of him leading a double life never crossed her mind.
Despite his behaviour, she still felt they could make a fresh start. They moved into an elegant four-bedroom house together and Aman introduced her to his parents for the first time.
‘But his mother wouldn’t admit I existed to her friends,’ says Kirsten. ‘She was embarrassed by me.

‘Looking back, she and his father obviously knew he was still with Zabeen and hated lying to cover for their son’s indiscretions.’

In October 1994, Aman agreed they would finally get married. But it was far from the big, white wedding Kirsten had dreamed of. He invited an imam to his house to conduct the nikah, a Muslim marriage ceremony that is not legally binding in Britain.

‘It was over in five minutes and just felt surreal,’ says Kirsten. None of her family were present, but at least, she thought, she finally had a ring on her finger. 
Despite Aman’s rare display of commitment, it didn’t take long for old wounds in their relationship to emerge again.
He claimed to be away ‘on business’ for days at a time, but Kirsten would hear from the few friends with whom she kept in touch that he had been seen with Zabeen. Confronting him, however, brought no answers. ‘He accused me of being paranoid and ungrateful for questioning his absence,’ she says.

Then came yet another humiliation. In 2001, an acquaintance told Kirsten that Zabeen was pregnant with Aman’s fifth child.
Surely, you might ask, after all this, why didn’t Kirsten just leave her duplicitous partner?
But Aman’s manipulative tendencies and sustained criticism had left her broken and lacking in self-esteem.

‘He said he was under pressure from his family to make it work with Zabeen,’ says Kirsten. ‘And while I felt deflated and angry, I loved him too much to leave and he was relentless in his determination to make me stay.
‘He alternated between telling me I was the most wonderful woman in the world and making me believe I’d be nothing without him. It was a game to him.

‘He wore me down until my confidence was shattered. I didn’t know what to believe and began to feel I didn’t deserve any better.’
Unbelievably, Kirsten managed to ignore the overwhelming evidence of Aman’s betrayals and focused on their life together and their son.

‘He was a diligent father — Zak adored him — and he was so romantic,’ says Kirsten. ‘He’d whisk me off to Paris at a moment’s notice. On my 30th birthday he bought me a VW Beetle convertible.
‘And he told me Zabeen wouldn’t let him visit the children because he was with me. So even when he disappeared, I told myself he wasn’t with her.’
Kirsten became pregnant again and their daughter, Iman, was born in January 2006. Aman’s tenderness to her and their newborn baby gave Kirsten the courage to press for a ‘proper’ marriage. She begged him to make their union legal with a civil ceremony. 

Then came another body blow. Aman finally confessed: they couldn’t wed because he was still married to Zabeen.

‘He said their divorce had never been finalised because of an administrative error,’ says Kirsten.

‘Looking back it was an obvious lie, but I was so hurt and shattered I just wept with anger. I couldn’t process the level of his deceit. We stayed up all night arguing.’
Newly emboldened, a resolute Kirsten insisted she fill out and file his divorce papers. The decree absolute came through a month before they wed in July 2007.  
Despite everything, their wedding was a traditional affair: a civil ceremony in a sprawling country house. Kirsten wore an ivory silk dress. There was a three-tier cake and a harpist.

‘None of his family except his eldest son came,’ says Kirsten.
Life settled into a familiar pattern: family trips to theme parks, film nights on the sofa and Aman was always there for bath-time.

But this leopard hadn’t changed his spots.

After another five-day business trip in early 2008, a suspicious Kirsten went online and discovered via an ancestry website she’d used years before after learning of Aman’s previous indiscretions, that he had fathered a sixth child with Zabeen just a month before Iman was born.

‘I went ballistic,’ she says. ‘He’d made a mockery of our marriage. He admitted he had slept with Zabeen — just once, of course.
‘He locked me in our bedroom and cried for hours, begging me not to leave.

‘At that moment, the scales were lifted from my eyes. I didn’t love this man any more. But my self-esteem was in tatters and I had a family to support. So, I stayed.’
It was the worst thing she could have done. For Aman believed she’d never leave him and he became not only contemptuous, but terrifyingly callous.

‘He wanted to have sex four times a week and if I refused he’d say there was something wrong with me,’ she says.
‘He didn’t come home until late. I was sure he was still sleeping with Zabeen. I felt trapped and worthless and depressed. But I didn’t have the confidence to leave.’

Then, one desperate night, Kirsten found the website Women Scorned, which provides emotional and legal support for wives wronged by their husbands.

‘I finally felt someone was on my side. As I read other women’s stories, I realised I had a choice and I could leave Aman,’ she says.
First, she had to talk to Zak, who was by then 19. ‘I was terrified he’d take his father’s side,’ says Kirsten.

Instead, Zak made an astonishing admission: he’d known about his father’s secret life since he’d been just six when he had found Zabeen in bed with his father.

Aman had told Zak that it would destroy his mother if she knew the truth. The burden of all those years of secrecy finally released, Zak told his mother he wanted her to end the marriage with his father.
That evening Kirsten told her husband to leave. ‘I said he was a compulsive liar and I couldn’t stand the sight of him.

‘He said I was frigid and fat and that no one would ever want to be with me again. For once, I didn’t cry. He’d broken my heart so many times I had no tears left, only a sense of relief.’

Kirsten is filing for divorce. Sadly, her father died in 2010, but she is close to her mother again.
‘She said she’d always known Aman was a liar, but there was no point in telling me because I wouldn’t listen,’ says Kirsten. ‘I only wish I’d seen through his lies quicker.’

The Mail contacted Aman, now 46, earlier this week. He told us: ‘I was completely committed to Kirsten. Am I the only man in the world who has gone back to an ex? I don’t think I am.
‘They were just flings and, of course, I felt bad about it. I regret my behaviour.
‘I didn’t tell Zak to keep quiet, but I did say it wasn’t a good idea to tell his mother I was visiting my former wife to see the children.
‘I never went back to Zabeen after I got engaged to Kirsten.’

Finding revealed the Carthaginians really did sacrifice children!


Just as ancient Greek and Roman propagandists insisted, the Carthaginians did kill their own infant children, burying them with sacrificed animals and ritual inscriptions in special cemeteries to give thanks for favours from the gods, according to a new study.
Argument has raged on the subject since cemeteries known as tophets – after the biblical account of a place of sacrifice – were excavated in the early 20th century on the outskirts of Carthage in modern Tunisia, and then at other Carthaginian sites in Sicily and Sardinia. The graves held tiny cremated bones carefully packed into urns, buried under tombstones giving thanks to the gods. One has a carving which has been interpreted as a priest carrying the body of a small child. Some archaeologists and historians saw the finds as proving ancient accounts of child sacrifice; others insisted they showed tender respect for cherished children who died before or soon after birth.
Quinn and her colleagues, a group of Punic archaeologists and historians from Italy and the Netherlands, who publish their findings in the journal Antiquity – where the argument has been rumbling on for several years – completely reject the latter theory.
Dido Building Carthage painting by JMW Turner (Public domain)
This is something dismissed as black propaganda because in modern times people just didn’t want to believe it,” said Josephine Quinn, a lecturer in ancient history at Oxford, who is behind the study, with international colleagues, of one of the most bitterly debated questions in classical archaeology.
“But when you pull together all the evidence – archaeological, epigraphic and literary – it is overwhelming and, we believe, conclusive: they did kill their children, and on the evidence of the inscriptions, not just as an offering for future favours but fulfilling a promise that had already been made.
“This was not a common event, and it must have been among an elite because cremation was very expensive, and so was the ritual of burial. It may even have been seen as a philanthropic act for the good of the whole community.”