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Meet The Nigerian Who Sold Floyd Mayweather His Exquisite Cars

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Obi Okeke and Floyd Mayweather.
Floyd Mayweather is known to the world as a man who loves to show off his wealth especially in his range of cars.Hehas over 10 different exotic cars and he is one who loves to show off and get the attention.

However do you know that his car dealer is a Nigerian man who goes by the name Obi Okeke.

Obi resides in Los Angeles, United States of America and explains catering to the Boxing prince is not as easy as people seem to think.

He explains that in one very night as he was sound asleep, Floyd called him at around 3 a.m. last and told him he wants a Bugatti Veyron sitting in the driveway of his Las Vegas mansion in 12 hours.

Mr Okeke popularly known as Dr. Bugatti had to perform a miracle, he basically had a bath and left to Fusion Luxury Motors, the Chatsworth, Calif., dealership he opened in 2012 and co-owns. He checked his notes, hopped on a plane, secured the car and drove it to Mayweather himself.

And he did all these in 11 hours.

He explains that this is the only way to carter to an often spontaneous Mayweather, who is said to have made about 180 million dollars after his victory over Manny Pacquaio.

Okeke explains that Mayweather requires everyone he works with to be dependable, so there’s no room for mediocrity when dealing with Mayweather.

Okeke explains that over the years he has sold over 39 cars to Mayweather, including a $3.2 million Ferarri Enzo and three Bugatti Veyrons that are worth $6.2 million combined. In a career spanning nearly 30 years, Okeke has sold cars to the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jessica Simpson, Ellen DeGeneres, Chris Tucker and more.

Okeke began his career as a car dealer in 1987 and then moved on to manage stores for Mercedes-Benz, Lexus, BMW, Ferrari and Maserati before he started his own.

The 53-year-old explains his humble origin and his business growth in this interview with Automotive News.


Were you born in the U.S.?

I was not. My father is from Nigeria; my mother is from Ohio. I was born in Nigeria. My parents have been married for 57 years. When I was a kid, Nigeria had a civil war, so we escaped from Nigeria as refugees, just my mom and the kids. Then we went back to Nigeria. My parents weren’t crazy about the school system. My mom’s best friend was in charge of Swissair for western Africa, so they shipped me off to Switzerland.

When did you first meet Floyd?

Back in 2008, 2009. I was general manager of a Ferrari dealership. A business associate brought him to the Ferrari dealership. That was the first time I met Floyd, and then I transacted on two Ferraris with him.

How has your approach to the business changed over the years from working at a Chevy dealership to now?

My parents sent me to school in Switzerland as a young child, so I’ve always been very close to the European cars. And that’s why I was with Volkswagen. I tried to get a job at BMW and Mercedes, but nobody would hire me in LA, so I just took a job with Lexus. And then from Lexus to BMW, Mercedes, Ferrari, Maserati.

How has it changed?

I focus a lot more on customer service. My focus is taking care of the client because when you go to a dealership to acquire a car, it’s basically they want you in and they want you out. It’s a numbers game. I like to focus time on taking care of the clients and spending time with the clients. And trying to do events that may be worth their while, or something that might be engaging to them. That’s how I view it.

With Floyd, I saw that he called you and said he wanted a Bugatti in 12 hours. That sounds like an impossible task.

He called me at 3 in the morning. This was Bugatti No. 2. The second Bugatti I sold him, and he wanted it in 12 hours. This was approximately a year ago [in the lead-up to the first Marcos Maidana fight] because he wanted the car to drive to the gym that day. He wanted a different Bugatti to drive to the gym.

When he called you at 3 a.m., what was running through your head?

I was just getting accustomed to receiving calls from him in the middle of the night for the past six weeks. When he called me in the middle of the night, I would just basically keep the phone on. That particular night, when he called me, my wife was like, “Oh, my God, honey, who is this calling you?” I picked up the call, walked downstairs as I’m talking to him, and he told me he wanted a car in his driveway in 12 hours.

I was a little foggy, obviously, I was in a deep sleep. So first thing I did was I hopped in the shower. You gotta wake yourself up. Got dressed, then I went to my office. I got to my office around 4:45, 5 in the morning. … Once I hung up with him, I’m just thinking of a strategy of how I’m going to get him this car in that time frame. …

I knew where there were a few cars. I said, well, I need to hop on a plane. I think I took a 7:30 flight out in the morning. I went to a destination that was closest to him that I felt I could get the car to him. When I got there, they weren’t open yet. So I went to IHOP, got some breakfast, then I went there and said I want to buy this Bugatti. They thought that I wasn’t serious. I called my partner, wired the money. Then the problem was trying to get a truck to flatbed it to his home. That was the biggest problem. The biggest hiccup was trying to find a specialized flatbed. When I called him, I said, “Champ, the problem is going to be getting the car to your house on a flatbed.” He goes, “I don’t care; just drive it to me.” I won’t tell you where I was, so I hit the road, and I drove it to him. That’s how I got it to him. …

On Bugatti No. 3, he called me at around 4:30 in the afternoon, and he wanted that car at his place by midnight. That was feasible because that car was in the LA area.

Is that just the life of a luxury exotic-car dealer?

He will call me on cars that are $500,000 and up. $1 million, $2 million, $3 million, that’s when I’ll get the call. I sold him a lot of [Rolls-Royces], and I sold him a lot of Bentleys. I don’t know if a franchised dealer is willing to do what I do. I don’t know if a franchised dealer is going to be able to take the phone calls in the middle of the night. I don’t know if they’re going to be able to open up their showroom in the middle of the night for him.

My rule with Floyd is one hour. Floyd will call me and say, “I’m on my way.” He’ll call me at midnight, 12:30, 1, 2 in the morning and say, “I’m on my way.” That means he’s on his way to my dealership. The only thing I ask of him is just give me one hour because I’ve got to get up and get ready and head to the dealership. My dealership is about 45 minutes from my house. He will call me in Las Vegas, sitting on his jet about to take off, and tell me he’s on his way. It takes him about 45 minutes to get to LA from Vegas. I try to give him service that nobody else will provide.


Do you think he’s trying to challenge you?

You never know what his next move is going to be. You never know. … I don’t know if he challenges me, I just know he has high expectations of himself, so therefore there are going to be high expectations of everybody around him. There isn’t any room for mediocrity at all. It doesn’t exist. …

We’re in a restaurant at 12:30 at night in Vegas, and we’re just sitting there hanging out. He tells the guy to go to my car and get a bag. They get a bag, he goes to the bathroom, he runs out of the bathroom, out of the restaurant and just keeps running! It’s his security detail’s job to realize he’s going jogging [and] to hop in their cars and follow him for 7 miles! It’s incredible.

I’m at the Wynn resort in Vegas. He calls me at 12:30 [after] midnight, and Vegas is on fire. He says, “Obi, what are you doing?” I say I’m just hanging out. He says, “OK, why don’t come meet me at Fatburger?” I go to Fatburger on the strip, and I hang out with him at Fatburger. From there, we go to his house. We’re hanging out at his house. Then these bags start moving around. I said, “Floyd what are we doing?” He said, “Let’s go to the gym.”

At 3:30 in the morning, he starts heading to the gym. He spars for one hour, killing these sparring partners. And then he runs out of the gym and starts running for 7 miles. I have him on video. He doesn’t care what time it is. If he feels the need to do what he wants to do to workout and train, he’s going to do it. I don’t know if he challenges me or if I’m just in this environment of his and this is just how he operates. It keeps me on my toes. It makes me want to work harder. It makes me think out of the box. I push myself harder. I take it all in stride, and I appreciate the opportunity. I make sure that I do whatever I can possibly do to meet and fulfill his needs and his demands. I view it as a blessing.

I know you said in that video that he forces you to raise your game.

Absolutely, I raise my game. It puts me out of my comfort zone. Sometimes we need to be out of our comfort zone.

He’s got a residence at the Ritz-Carlton in downtown LA. If he’s there for like a week, when he leaves, he will gather every single valet driver, 10 or 11 of them. He will distribute anywhere from $8,000 to $10,000 to each of the valet guys. If you look at Floyd, and you look at the games he goes to, whether the Lakers games, the Clippers games, whatever game he goes to, whoever’s with him staffwise, they’re with him. They all watch the game. He doesn’t just buy tickets for himself and then leaves everybody outside. He buys tickets for himself and everybody. He brings them in to watch the game. …

I was at his house the other night. I was trying to leave. I said, “Floyd, I’ll be right back” because I hadn’t eaten all day. … He said, “Don’t go anywhere, let me call my chef.” He calls his chef; she comes over an hour later and cooks this big meal for everybody. The guy is an anomaly. I’ve never met anybody like this man.

Would you think he was a fighter by just looking at his personality?

No. His personality, if you hung out with him and you never knew who he was, you would think he was a mathematician or a nuclear physicist. If you just looked at him and looked at his face and just talked to him, you would think that. He always has a strategy. … He’s a guy with a plan.

Have you thought about opening a store in Vegas?

We think about it; we talk about it. Because of where we are in a very remote area, [Mayweather] drives out to the middle of nowhere to see me. I open up in the middle of the night every time. Seventy percent of our cars go out of state, so yeah, we could definitely operate in a place like Vegas. … I’m out there five to six times a month right now. Sometimes I’m there three times in a week.

Looking at Mayweather’s car collection, do you think that’s part of his competitive spirit to have the rarest cars?

It’s part of his lifestyle. Floyd understands that there are a lot of people that claim to be living a lifestyle they are not living. And he is living that lifestyle. Unlike anybody else, he has no debt. He has no debt on any of his cars and real estate holdings. He has a tremendous amount of cars and a tremendous amount of real estate — and no debt. There are celebrities out there I know, and a lot people know, that finance their cars and lease their cars. All of their Bugattis are financed and leased. He’s got three Bugattis that are all cash. Every car in his garage, all cash. All of the condos he has in Vegas, all cash. Fifth Avenue in New York, cash. Miami, 7,000-square-foot penthouse, cash. LA, cash. The thing about Floyd, he is the only signatory on his account. Nobody manages his money but him. So when I get paid, it’s not like we’re waiting for the business office. It’s all Floyd. He writes the check himself.

Nobody else does that?

No. Everybody that I’ve dealt with, the money was coming from their business office, or [an] agent was going to get the money to me. He is the first celebrity I’ve met that writes his own check, that manages his own money. I’m not expecting a check from a CPA or an agent or anything. It’s from him.

Mayweather is currently unbeaten at 48-0 with 26 knockouts, and is expected to retire after his expected final bout in September.




We Are Ready For Handover – Amaechi

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Rivers State Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, has expressed the readiness of his Administration to handover on May 29. Amaechi who dismissed rumours he would not be handing over the reign of governance on the date, wondered what he would be doing in office after May 29. The Rivers state Governor averred that the entire cabinet has made ready their notes preparatory to the terminal date of his regime.

“We are ready for handover unlike the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, at the centre that is busy making new appointments and sacking people. They have refused to brief the Muhammadu Buhari Transition Team and All Progressives Congress, APC, is not screaming blue murder. Rather, the APC at the centre is meeting and planning and preparing for government”.

Painting an ugly scenario in Rivers State, Gov. Amaechi stated that rather than support democracy, PDP has been busy doctoring election results and Voter Register.

“Unfortunatelyin Rivers State, the PDP is busy doctoring election results, doctoring Voter Register as to cover their stolen mandate, and crying wolf to cover their mischief”.

Amaechi who spoke through the Rivers State Commissioner of Information and Communications, Ibim Semenitari, added that whoever would take over from him has no reason to panic.

In a statement in Port Harcourt on Friday, Semenitari dismissed insinuations the outgoing regime had shown no co-operation with the man the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, declared winner of the April 11 governorship election in Rivers State. While dismissing reports the outgoing Administration has been un-co-operative with the PDP, Semenitari allayed such fears saying that PDP already has everything going for it.

“They stole the outcome of the April 11 election and gave no hoot; they declared their candidates winners with the criminal connivance of INEC and cared less about local, national and international opinion that what took place in Rivers state on April 11 was everything but an election. The more APC had pushed for electoral materials which are statutory demands of an electoral litigation, the farther PDP and INEC had kept it, and seemingly, they have had their way. So, they have all going for them. They have nothing to worry about. If and when Mr. Ezebuwon Nyesom Wike, will be sworn in, the issue of handover notes and other statutory briefings should not be any worry to him. Already Wike has as part of his transition team the State Deputy Governor, Engr. Tele Renner Ikuru, who is ViceChairman of the Rivers Stare Executive Council, and who is abreast of all projects and Programmes of the current administration, having chaired many sensitive state government committees as well as state cabinet meetings.” Semenitari said.

“After all, PDP has constituted Inauguration and Transition Committees, respectively”.

The Information and Communications Commissioner who insisted PDP stole the mandate it is parading, reasoned that with the pair of Ikuru and Wike, PDP should have no difficulty with any briefings that they might need from the current administration. She advised PDP to learn from APC which has not raised any hairs despite what are deliberate steps at the centre to provokethe party.  “Governor Amaechi has not made any new appointment as he knows he is leaving office, unlike what PDP is doing at the centre. They are busy sacking and making appointments, functions that should be entirely left for the in-coming Administration. Provocative as it is, APC has rather, concerned itself with continued preparations to give Nigerians good governance. APC has refused to dance to PDP’s evil drumbeats, choosing to show maturity.

“Let PDP in Rivers state leave Governor Amaechi alone. He is a busy man and did not contest any elections. Governor Amaechi is known for committing his all into any worthy assignment or duty he is called to do. Having governed Rivers State for close to eight years, Amaechi cannot be happier that history and posterity will judge him fairly. A fact  a million PDPs cannot obliterate”.

First Photos Of Cynthia Morgan Live In Abakaliki For #StarMusicTrek 2015

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Cynthia Morgan is live at the Abakaliki pre-Trek gig ahead of Saturday's Star Music Trek concert happening at Abakaliki Township Stadium.

German Juice hit maker, Cynthia Morgan will be performing at the concert tomorrow, Saturday, May 9, 2015 alongside Burna Boy, Wande Coal, MI Abaga, Comedian Lafup and others at the Abakaliki Township Stadium, Abakaliki.

Check out the photos below:





Messy Divorce Saga: Abigail Igwe Exposes John Fashanu's Dirty Secrets

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John Fashanu and Abigail Igwe.
The John Fashanu and Abigail Igwe divorce saga has got a new twist as Abigail has spilled the beans in a no-holding-back interview with Encomium.

After trading few words with her estranged husband, Adaeze Yobo's mum, Abigail Igwe has fully responded to the allegations of her ex-husband, John Fashanu.

Recall that he initially accused her of being a lesbian, a greedy wife and being violent, Abigail however took the opportunity to clear the air on allegations in a recent chat with Encomium magazine.

“All the things he told you are lies. No media house that wants to survive should listen to John Fashanu.He’s a chronic liar. He’s a drowning man who is looking for another person to drown with. Is it a man that should be ranting or a woman? He’s the one that is hurt that I kicked him out. Who does not know him?

“I was ashamed that I lived with such a man. I didn’t know what to say. People will say were you not told? Is it a secret that he’s like that? I’m not such a loud person. That’s why I quietly closed the chapter”, she said.

Slamming the ex-footballer more, the estranged woman continued, “I’ve kicked him out so many times. He kept doing a lot of things. It was about fraud initially. He was continually defrauding people. That he had a wife that is a lawyer.

“He defrauded many footballers, we saw him on TV. N2 million from them, from poor families.He threatened them with guns. And they’d be crying. I kept kicking him out of my house. It was few months after, about a year. That I first kicked him out.”

She also went on to narrate how she caught her ex-husband with her maid in bed.

“The first one was in my house red-handed. I was travelling, and he said he wanted to live in my house. That he would miss me.

“I came back, accompanied by my friend. She was driving. I was looking for evidence. I told her that I was getting ready for divorce. When we came in and opened the door, I caught them naked.

“The house girl is Igbo, and she ran. I called her came back. I spoke in Igbo. I told her that this man is shit. I cannot go back to him, that she should not worry. When the girl asked if I had forgiven her, I said yes. I said she should go back.

“She said the cook had warned her to stop sleeping with John.

“How can a man say his wife stole N1 million? He should be ashamed. He used to steal my money. I never asked him.

“I told my friend to pick the maid’s trousers and slippers…They were all ashamed. My friend picked the items and ran.

“John chased my friend and in the process, bashed my car. My friend kept running. I needed the evidence to go to court.

“He later called my pastor. That he should calm me down. My pastor said I should forget about him. That I should leave him. That the trouble was too much.

“He told my pastor that I should not go to court now. That I should allow the separation first. He went to pastor to ask him to beg that I should come back. My pastor can testify.”

Abigail also claimed that John Fashanu psychologically killed his brother.

“John was bad to the extent that he psychologically killed his brother.

“He said that his brother was mean to him. The brother didn’t allow him to shine. That people thought he was Justin. That he needed his brother out of the way. He back bit his brother.

“He then told me that during Justin’s burial he stood behind after. They thought he was mourning. But he was laughing, that he felt happier that his brother committed suicide.

“That, at last, he can have his way, now shine.

“That attack is the best form of defence. I told him that the world is not a football pitch.

“There’s a land he wanted to build an academy. He tried, and he didn’t succeed. Eventually, he included my name in the document, and we finally got the land.

“We applied for 10, we were given 7 acres.

“To my amazement, he changed the document to another company’s. My name was not in the new papers.

“All these toiling came to naught.

“This happened two years ago. I couldn’t talk. He’s very aggressive. His reply was attack.

Debunking reports that she’s a lesbian, Abigail Igwe had this to say;

“This is ridiculous. He didn’t catch me with anybody. Because he’s going to court, he’s looking for anything.

“I had prepared for divorce last year. The lawyer had prepared everything.

“I got log of my calls from MTN. He was the one that called me from Colombia.

“I caught him with two women. One was our maid.

“I caught them in my house. I travelled and came back. He didn’t know.

“He swore not to give me divorce. That he would frustrate me.

“He’s a serial househelp sex abuser. He slept with his maid in London. He told me that his girlfriend in Lagos accused him of sleeping with the maid. He was the one that said so”.

Fashanu who played for England and hosted Gladiators has been in a bitter divorce with Abigail.

Abigail, who is the mother of former Eagles captain Joseph Yobo’s wife, Adaeze has denied these claims. Abigail and Fashanu met in 2009. They married two years later but the relationship hit the skids last year.

Ever Wondered Where Flight Attendants Go While You Sleep On The Plane?

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There's a point in every long-haul flight when they dim the lights and you know you'll spend the next few hours trying to balance your head on a tiny sliver of headrest, before giving up and watching another film.

But where do the flight attentants/cabin crew silently disappear off to?

Well, thanks to these behind-the-scenes pictures released by Boeing, via TravelSkills, now we know.

While their sleeping arrangements are still cosy, they get slightly more leg room than an economy passenger. That said, they don’t get to go on a week-long holiday when they step off the plane. So, swings and roundabouts.

In some Boeing planes, the Crew Rest Departments (CRCs) sit above the passenger cabin, which is snug.


In others, such as the Cathay Pacific 777-300ER, a secret staircase at the rear of the plane leads to the stewards’ rest area. It's sort-of tunnel like, and they have to duck to get into it, but it sleeps eight.


The beds measure 6ft by 2.5ft and have thick curtains so you can try to drown out your colleague's snores. Oh, and the sign on the door specifies, 'one person per bunk'.

This is where the magic happens (or not) on a Boeing 787. Dreamy.


Who knew all this was going on behind the scenes?


Perks vary. Some airlines offer staff sleep suits and ‘entertainment systems’ (do they just mean TVs?)


As for the pilots, they have chill-out, er, chairs.


By Metro | Pictures: © Boeing

The 25 Richest People In Africa 2015

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These super-wealthy Africans are highly influential and inspire many people in the continent.

1. Aliko Dangote – Net Worth: $15.7 Billion (Nigerian)

The world’s richest black man. He is heralded by some as the face of the new Nigeria. He is the wealthiest man in Africa. He built his fortune through three commodities: sugar, cement, flour and he plans to invest in oil.

2. Johann Rupert – Net Worth: $7.4 Billion (South African)

Johann Rupert is a luxury goods billionaire. He is the chairman of Compagnie Financiere Richemont, a Swiss company best known for brands like Cartier and Montblanc. Rupert owns 7 percent stake in Remgro and 25 percent of Reinet. He worked for sometime at Chase Manhattan Bank. He has been a vocal opponent of fracking.

3. Nicky Oppenheimer – Net Worth: $6.7 Billion (South African)

The Oppenheimer family ended its 85-year reign atop diamond giant De Beers in 2012, when Nicky Oppenheimer sold his 40 percent stake to Anglo American for $5.1 billion.

4. Christoffel Wiese – Net Worth: $6.3 Billion (South African)

South African self-made billionaire continues to chase deals; adding his fortune. The retailing tycoon announced plans to swap his minority stake in IT company DigiCore for a stake in ConvergeNet. Wiese owns a 15% stake in Shoprite Holdings, a chain of low-price supermarkets with a presence across multiple African countries.

5. Nassef Sawiris – Net Worth: $6.3 Billion (Egyptian)

Nassef Sawiris is the wealthiest man in Egypt. The 53-year-old billionaire won a tax evasion case that had pitted him against the government of former Egyptian president Morsi.

6. Mike Adenuga – Net Worth: $4 Billion (Nigerian)

The second richest man in Nigeria. Mike Adenuga made his fortune through investments in mobile telecom and oil production.

7. Mohamed Mansour – Net Worth: $4 Billion (Egyptian)

Mohamed oversees the Mansour Group. He reported an increase in sales in the family’s GM car business, which had taken a dive due to the 2011 Egyptian revolution.

8. Nathan Kirsh – Net Worth: $3.9 Billion (Swazi)

Swazi businessman, Nathan Kirsh is the founder of Jetro Holdings, a cash and carry wholesaler of perishable and non-perishable food products, household goods, equipment, supplies and related goods for grocery retailers. Kirsch made his first fortune in Swaziland several decades ago when he founded a corn milling business in 1958. He subsequently expanded into wholesale food distribution in apartheid South Africa and commercial property development.

9. Isabel dos Santos – Net Worth: $3.3 Billion (Angolan)

Africa’s richest woman, Isabel dos Santos is working to expand her stable of investments. She is the daughter of Angola’s longtime president Jose Eduardo dos Santos.

10. Issad Rebrab & family – Net Worth: $3.1 Billion (Algerian)

Issad Rebrab is the founder of Cevital, Algeria’s largest privately held conglomerate, which owns one of the largest sugar refineries in the world. The group also has interests in port terminals, auto distribution, mining and agriculture. He is Algeria’s richest person.

11. Naguib Sawiris – Net Worth: $3.1 Billion (Egyptian)

Naguib Sawiris resumed as CEO at his company Orascom Telecom Media & Technology (OTMT) in October 2013. Share prices increased by more than 7 percent due to this.

12. Youssef Mansour – Net Worth: $2.9 Billion (Egyptian)

The Egyptian billionaire maintains a lower profile than his billionaire brothers Mohamed and Yasseen. All the brothers have stake in Mansour Group.

13. Koos Bekker – Net Worth: $2.3 Billion (South African)

Bekker stepped down as CEO of media conglomerate Naspers in February 2014, but that did not stop the stock from rising in double digits. Refusing to take a salary, Bekker has traditionally been compensated via stock option grants that vest over time.

14. Othman Benjelloun – Net Worth: $2.3 Billion (Moroccan)

This 82-year-old billionaire has interests in insurance, banking and telecom in Morocco through his holding company FinanceCom. He is the CEO of BMCE Bank. He is also the chairman of holding company FinanceCom which has interests in banking, insurance, and telecom in Morocco.

15. Yasseen Mansour – Net Worth: $2.3 Billion (Egyptian)

Yasseen and his billionaire brothers Mohammed and Youssef run Mansour Group. The Group owns caterpillar dealerships and General Motor dealerships in many African nations. They also own supermarkets, restaurant franchises, and Philip Morris distribution in Egypt.

16. Patrice Motsepe – Net Worth: $2.1 Billion (South African)

Patrice Motsepe is a self-made billionaire who is the founder and chairman of African Rainbow Minerals. He is South Africa’s first and only black billionaire. He also holds a stake in Sanlam, a publicly traded financial services company.

17. Stephen Saad – Net Worth: $2.1 Billion (South African)

Stephen Saad is the founder of Aspen Pharmacare, the largest pharmaceutical company in Africa. His wealth increased by $600 million over the past year due to increase in the company’s stock price. The company has a market capitalization of $11 billion. Saad is the company’s largest shareholder.

18. King Mohammed VI – Net Worth: $2.1 Billion (Moroccan)

The king of Morocco is the 7th richest royal in the world. He celebrated his 15th year on the throne in July 2014. He inherited around 40 percent stake in Societe Nationale d’Investissement from his father.

19. Mohamed Al Fayed – Net Worth: $2 Billion (Egyptian)

Mohammed Al-Fayed sold his Harrod’s department store in London to Qatar Holding for a reported $2.4 billion in 2010. In 2014, he sold Fulham Football Club, which he acquired in 1997 to American billionaire Shahid Khan for a reported $300 million. He now owns the famed Hotel Ritz in Paris which he closed in August 2012 to start construction on what will be the hotel’s biggest redo since it was built in 1898 and also owns Cocosa, a U.K.-based discount fashion website.

20. Folorunsho Alakija – Net Worth: $1.9 Billion (Nigerian)

Folorunsho Alakija is the second richest woman in Africa and third richest black woman in the world. She controls Famfa Oil. She founded the Rose of Sharon Foundation in 2008. It works to help widows and orphans.

21. Onsi Sawiris – Net Worth: $1.8 Billion (Egyptian)

This 84-year-old billionaire is the patriarch of Egypt’s richest family. He founded the Orascom Construction Industries. Currently his son Nassef heads the company.

22. Aziz Akhannouch – Net Worth: $1.7 Billion (Moroccan)

Aziz Akhannouch is the majority shareholder of Akwa Group, a multibillion-dollar Moroccan conglomerate with interests in petroleum, gas and chemicals through its publicly traded subsidiaries.

23. Allan Gray – $1.6 Billion (South African)

Allan Gray is the founder of Cape Town-based investment management firm, Allan Gray Limited which he founded in 1973, after earning his MBA from Harvard and spending eight years at Fidelity in the US. The company manages $34 billion, making it the largest privately owned asset manager in South Africa. He also owns Orbis Investment Management in Bermuda which manages $30 billion.

24. Miloud Chaabi – Net Worth: $1.3 Billion (Moroccan)

Miloud Chaabi’s business Yanna Holding operates hotels and supermarkets, and develops real estate. It also owns SNEP, a chemical manufacturer in Morocco.

25. Mohammed Dewji – Net Worth: $1.25 Billion (Tanzanian)

This 40-year-old Tanzanian billionaire is the youngest among Africa’s 50 richest for the second year. He owns 75 percent of METL Group, one of Tanzania’s largest industrial conglomerates founded by his father.

Phyno Acquires Multi-Million Naira Property In Lekki

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Nigerian rapper and record producer, Azubuike Chibuzo Nelson, popularly known as Phyno has joined the league of showbiz stars acquiring properties on the Island.

The rapper just acquired a multi-million naira house at Shelvey View Estate, located at Chevron Drive, Lekki. The property is a three-flat duplex.

Phyno has been working on the acquisition for some time now, and he has finally scaled the hurdle.

Since Phyno made his first hit, he has become one of the most consistent artistes, churning out one hit after the other. His vocal and lyrical prowess has also ranked him among the most featured artistes in the country.

Like Bracket, J Martins and May D, Phyno is another artiste mentored by the P-Square brothers and their elder brother, Jude Engees Okoye.

In 2014, he acquired a brand new Bentley Gt Coupe automobile worth N30 million.

The artiste, who sports a Mohawk hairstyle, initially started up as a producer in 2003, and did beats for artistes like 2Shotz, J Martins, Mr. Raw, Flavour, Timaya, Ruggedman and Bracket. In 2010, he then decided to try his hands on the other side of the booth, starting his own rap career, and the result was his first official album “No Guts, No Glory.”

Last year, he was enmeshed in a gay scandal, having appeared to be kissing fellow artiste, Kcee in a viral picture. But he swiftly denied the rumour, saying: “The only thing that was in my head when I saw the picture was where did this happen. I said back then that a gangstar like me could not have been involved in something like that. The fact is that, I am not a gangstar and I don’t want people to see me in that light. I think I am too serious and cool for that kind of thing. People say I am gay. That’s laughable because these same people reported some time ago that I impregnated a girl. So you can see that these things don’t work together. My life is all about entertainment, as long as the people are happy about what they read, I am happy too.”

Church Housing Refugees Raided By South African Police

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Johannesburg, South Africa - South African police have arrested at least 400 foreign nationals, after police backed by the military raided several buildings, including a church housing refugees in central Johannesburg on Friday.

Katlego Mogale, a spokesperson for the South African Police Services described Friday's joint operation between police, the South African national defence force and the Ministry of Home Affairs in Johannesburg as a “crime-prevention clean-up" in which "several people (were) arrested for being illegal immigrants".

"Those being held at the [central] station are being verified by the Ministry of Home Affairs for their documentation," Mogale told Al Jazeera.

There were conflicting reports of the numbers detained by the police, with some local media reporting the number was likely higher than 500.

Mogale, the police spokesperson, would not confirm the number to Al Jazeera.

Witnesses said a large contingent of armed police officers descended on central Johannesburg on Friday morning, raiding a series of buildings, before removing scores of foreigners living in the Central Methodist Church on Pritchard Street.

The Methodist Church in South Africa is known for housing thousands of foreign nationals after the devastating xenophobic attacks in 2008 that killed 62 people. Since then, hundreds of foreign nationals, mostly Zimbabweans, continued to live in the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg.

The raids on Friday come six weeks after a wave of anti-immigrant violence swept parts of Durban and Johannesburg. South African authorities have been accused of a sluggish response to the mobs that targeted foreign businesses and homes.

At least eight people were killed, though the South African government insists the death toll linked to xenophobia is seven after ruling that Mozambican national Emmanuel Sithole's murder on April 18 was an act of criminality and not xenophobia.

Hundreds however were injured and thousands displaced, mostly around the sea-side city of Durban.

'State xenophobia'

Civil society were quick to condemn the Friday's raids, accusing the government of exercising 'state xenophobia'.

As news spread of the raids in the city, more than a 100 people assembled outside the Johannesburg Central Police Station in protest.

"On one hand they (the government) are asking foreigners in camps to return to their communities, and yet at the same time, they are targeting them in their homes," Gilles van Cutsem, MSF medical director in South Africa, said.

"The South African government is sending contradictory messages and foreigners are feeling targeted," Van Cutsem told Al Jazeera.

On Friday, George Chilonga, deputy consul general of Malawi embassy in Johannesburg, confirmed to Al Jazeera that the repatriation process of his country's citizens was now complete. Chilong said his government would be compiling a full assessment of the events and incidents on the ground.

Meanwhile, police said they arrested 29 people and confiscated up to $900,000 worth of illegal goods after a raid in Belville, near Cape Town, on Thursday.

Activists said another protest against the police was planned for Saturday.

By Azad Essa and Khadija Patel

Ivorian Child Smuggled To Spain In Suitcase

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Spanish Police have found an eight-year-old Ivorian boy hidden in a suitcase that was smuggled across the border into territory in north Africa, officials have said.

A 19-year-old woman took the case through a pedestrian crossing from Morocco into the small Spanish-governed territory of Ceuta on Thursday, a spokesman for the Civil Guard police force said.

"When they put the suitcase through the scanner, the operator noticed something strange, which seemed to be a person inside the case," he told the AFP news agency.

"When it was opened they found a minor, in a terrible state."

The boy said he was eight years old and from Ivory Coast, according to the spokesman.

The Civil Guard arrested the woman, who was due to go before a judge.

They also arrested the boy's father when he tried to cross the border a few hours later. The father is Ivorian and lives in Spain's Canary Islands.


Thousands of migrants each year risk their lives trying to enter Ceuta and another Spanish territory bordering Morocco, Melilla, in search of a better life in Europe.

Many Africans try to scramble over the seven-metre (23-foot) fences that separate the Spanish cities from Morocco.

Others smuggle themselves over the border hidden in vehicles and cargoes or try to swim or sail from shores on the Moroccan side.

Earlier this week a 23-year-old Moroccan was found in a shipping container in the port of Melilla.

He was dehydrated after four days cooped up without food or water, since the container was left unattended over the May holiday weekend.

By Al Jazeera

Human Emotion Is The Variable In The Ebola Crisis

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When cases of Ebola were first reported in March 2014, signalling the start of an epidemic that would kill thousands of West Africans, WHO experts were convinced it would be only a matter of time before medical authorities would contain the disease. We were wrong.

Tried and true strategies that had worked to stop the spread of the disease in 24 previous Ebola outbreaks had failed, revealing terrible gaps in national healthcare systems and a deadly lack of trust on the part of the populations most affected.

Just as we believed in early 2014, we now hope the epidemic is under control. Yet the conditions that allowed infections to spiral out of control last year continue to exist, and as of April 12, there are still 37 cases of Ebola infections in Sierra Leone and Guinea.

Lack of prevention

Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone have released an itemised recovery plan to revamp their healthcare systems, provide food to compensate for a disrupted harvest, and move their economies forward.

The plan has an $8bn price tag, and the World Bank and other donors have already committed more than $1bn. This plan is a thoughtful approach to recovery, but as health experts we also need to focus on preventing the next epidemic by solving the problems that made this one so deadly.

Some have blamed the cause of the epidemic on the weak health systems of the three stricken countries; others have talked about the need for improved strategies to speed international response; while others still have pointed to the need for better R&D for diseases that affect developing countries.

All of those statements are true, just as it's true that the international community has worked on all those fronts for several years. But we have missed one important factor in debating solutions to prevent future global health emergencies caused by disease outbreaks.

Unlike a tsunami or an earthquake, the impact of an outbreak is insidious: human-to-human transmission is slow to reveal itself, and, most important, the spread and control of a disease epidemic hinges on attitudes and behaviours, many of them determined by how local populations feel about the people who are assigned to care for their health.

Professor Cheikh Ibrahima Niang, a Senegalese socio-anthropologist who has assisted WHO in understanding the behaviour and attitudes of communities in West Africa, argues that trust and confidence are the strategic tools for ending the epidemic and rebuilding the countries.

In a recent WHO presentation he told us: "Many of these people may be illiterate, but they are not stupid. They do not want to be passive recipients; they want to be actors in their own response to the crisis. And they are in mourning - purely medical interventions are not sufficient."

Distrust of healthcare

There is clearly much work to be done to build trust, when we consider the human dimension of the disease and the terrible suffering it has caused.

West Africans are used to frequent touching, strong family bonds and living in close quarters, so imagine the emotional impact of the necessary isolation and quarantine measures imposed largely by foreign medical staff, many of them clothed in the otherworldly garb designed to protect them from infection.

And add to that the perception of governments that could barely deliver on simple health necessities, let alone respond to a vicious virus. Meanwhile, those of us in the role of guardians of global health failed to see the danger posed, not only by the weak health systems, but by the lack of trust of populations whose behaviours would determine the course of the epidemic.

For many years the peoples of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone have relied on themselves to look after their health problems. They go to traditional healers or, when they can afford it, they turn to the private sector, where healthcare is generally more available but paid for out of pocket.

Years of war, followed by neglect of the health sector, had already eroded people's confidence in the system and driven them away from hospitals and health facilities. Even the medical profession itself had abandoned ship for better futures abroad. And those few who remained worked in dire conditions and were rarely remunerated.

History of distrust

So we know that addressing a history of distrust will be fundamental to inspiring new behaviours and attitudes. It will be crucial for building resilient health systems in the three West African countries. We know that to make those health systems capable of delivering quality services and absorb the shock of future crises - whether due to disease outbreaks or financial and economic downfalls - will require funding, medical training, technical assistance, infrastructure and information networks. But above all it will require the acceptance and trust of all communities.

The process must start at the district level and work upwards. A top-down, purely technical approach has clearly failed us in responding to the Ebola crisis, and it will not work in the building of shockproof systems.

We will need to help the governments of the three countries communicate at all levels of society, down to the smallest village, and to rebuild a legitimacy we had all clearly lost.

The devastated peoples of West Africa remind us that a national health system cannot work without their full participation. They are the key to ending this epidemic and to ensuring it does not happen again.

By Marie-Paule Kieny

Dr Marie-Paule Kieny was appointed WHO Assistant Director-General for Health Systems and Innovation in November 2012. She has published over 250 articles and reviews, mainly in the areas of infectious diseases, immunology and vaccinology.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera & NaijaScoop's editorial policy.

This Is What Ini Edo Is Up To Now

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Star actress, Ini Edo is currently writing her exams as a law student of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), Lagos.

She got admission to the institution on scholarship alongside Nollywood actor turned politician, Desmond Elliot.

Students of the institution have revealed that the multiple award-winning actress rarely attends lectures, apparently due to her busy schedules, but she usually “shows up” during examination periods.

The Glo ambassador, who broke into the movie industry in 2003 with her first role in ‘Thick Madam,’ studied Theatre Arts at the University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. She has therefore joined the likes of Richard Mofe-Damijo (RMD) and Kenneth Okonkwo in the league of thespians who delved into Law.

Ini Edo, who is currently in her 200-levels at NOUN, participated in the institution’s matriculation ceremony on July 12, 2014, during which she took a selfie with Elliot and posted it on Instagram.

She wrote: “I feel like like sm 12 years ago.. @desmondelliot we are doing dis for real.#openuniversity#lawstudent#educationisdekeytosuccess#if we can do it,u can do it.nvr too late.”

Ini Edo is a Theatre Arts graduate of the University of Calabar, who began her film career in the year 2000 and has featured in more than 200 movies since that time.

The beautiful actress turned 33 on April 19, and celebrated with some of her friends and colleagues at the Eko Hotels & Suites.

Drunk In Love: Mercy Aigbe Shares Rare Romantic Pic With Hubby

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Mercy Aigbe-Gentry rarely opens up on her private life or shows off her husband Lanre Gentry, but she recently shared the pic below with words, "The love of my life."

Many say she is the second wife but she has made it clear he divorced his first wife and she has no rival.

WHO Declares Liberia Ebola-Free

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Liberia has been declared free from Ebola after no new cases were reported for over a month, the World Health Organisation has said.

Peter Jan Graaf, the head of the United Nations Mission for Ebola Emergency, urged vigilence until the worst-ever recorded outbreak of the virus was extinguished in neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone.

No new cases were reported in 42 days - twice the maximum incubation period for the deadly disease.

"We're proud of what we collectively managed to do but we need to remain vigilant," he said. "The virus is not yet out of the region and as long as the virus is in the region we're still all of us potentially at risk."

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said that Liberia's completion of the WHO's benchmark for the end of an Ebola epidemic should not lead to complacency.

"We can't take our foot off the gas until all three countries record 42 days with no cases," said Mariateresa Cacciapuoti, MSF's head of mission in Liberia.

She urged Liberia to step up cross-border surveillance to prevent Ebola slipping back into the country.

A total of 11,005 people have died from Ebola in the West African countries of Liberia, neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone since the outbreak began in December 2013, WHO reported.

At least 4,700 of those have been in Liberia, where the outbreak peaked between August and October, with hundreds of cases a week, sparking international alarm.

Helped by the visible US military presence, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's government launched a national awareness campaign to stem the infectious disease, which is spread by physical contact with sick people.

Heightened surveillance

The UN Special Envoy on Ebola, David Nabarro, said this week that Liberian authorities had pledged to maintain heightened surveillance for at least a year after being declared Ebola-free on Saturday.

Nabarro suggested that, even though fewer than 20 new cases were reported in Guinea and Sierra Leone last week, it could take months to get to zero.

International aid organisations were forced to step in as the Ebola outbreak ravaged the region's poorly equipped and understaffed healthcare systems.

MSF - which was highly critical of the slow response by the United Nations and western governments - opened the world's largest Ebola management centre in Monrovia, with a capacity of 400 beds.

According to the WHO, a total of 868 health workers have caught the virus in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone since the start of the outbreak, of whom 507 died.

International Medical Corps (IMC), a charity that ran two Ebola clinics in Liberia, appealed for international support in rebuilding the healthcare system there in the wake of the virus.

"Now is the time to build on the momentum we have generated to strengthen the Liberian health system ... and change attitudes to keep the people of Liberia safe long into the future," said Anouk Boschma, IMC's acting country director in Liberia.

By Al Jazeera

The Deadly Business Of Migrant Smuggling

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Thousands have died on the perilous journey from Africa to Europe and with every boat that leaves Africa's shores, the situation gets worse. The migrants, who want a better shot at life in Europe, are risking their lives because legal channels just are not open to them.

Their misery creates an illicit market for people smugglers - with millions in profits taken in, often for the ultimate price. It is estimated that the human trafficking industry as a whole produces almost $26bn a year. Smuggling is part of that - though not typically a part which would continue to exploit people in the way human trafficking does.

Most journeys happen across the Mediterranean Sea - with more than 200,000 crossings and over 3,000 deaths in 2014. But it is a global phenomenon, and it happens in the Gulf of Aden, the Bay of Bengal, and over in the Caribbean Sea too in significant numbers.

Technology is exacerbating the problem. Some of the smugglers are openly advertising their services on Facebook. The Financial Times managed to snap an add before it was removed. A trip to Italy can cost $1,000, but if you are travelling from, say, Sudan to Libya, first of all you pay another $1,700 on top of that. There was a WhatsApp and Viber contact available.

It is a business as well as a human tragedy. So who are the migrants and what are they hoping for? Who benefits from their desperate search for a better life? And what is the cost of migrant smuggling?

Tarek Osman, from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, joins us from London to talk about the cost of migration, the deadly business of peopel smuggling, and whether there is a potential Marshall Plan for North Africa.

Vitali Klitschko: Ukraine's way forward

Ukraine is a country whose battles with Russia have created all sorts of geo-political and economic issues.

It is the type of thing which fired up former heavyweight boxing champion Vitali Klitschko, who is now the mayor of Kiev and who led the protests last year which brought a pro-Western government to power.

Patricia Sabga from Al Jazeera America sat down with Klitschko, to get his views on the way forward for Ukraine.

Iran's economic revival

In Iran the pursuit of a nuclear programme has taken a big economic toll over the years. But now, with Tehran agreeing with Western powers to limit that programme there is potential for some very good economic times.

Iran has been living with economic sanctions for almost a decade but it was the latest round in 2011 that did the real damage.

The US Congressional Research Service estimates Iran's economy is up to 20 percent smaller than it would have been without the sanctions enacted after 2010. And as international companies shut up shop, unemployment grew to 20 percent in the middle of 2012. Iran reckons the number was closer to 13 percent but that is three percent worse than US unemployment during the Great Recession in 2009.

Iran has got the world's fourth largest proven oil reserves, and second largest natural gas reserves. But according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Iran's energy exports slumped almost 50 percent in 2012-2013 to $63bn.

The removal of the nuclear-related sanctions could revive the Iranian economy: Western oil and gas companies could return to revitalise the industry, which is in need of new technology and investment.

So how will lifted sanctions benefit Iran's crippled economy? And how will this affect the geopolitics of the region?

Sean Evers, the managing director of The Gulf Intelligence, an energy networking firm, talked to Counting the Cost about Iran's economic future.

Click here to watch the video.

By Al Jazeera

It's True, I'm Getting Married This Year – Denrele

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Popular TV personality, Denrele Edun has been talking about his plans to get married for quite a while now. But, in a telephone conversation with Saturday Beats during the week, Denrele revealed that he would be getting married this year.

"It is true that I am about to get married but it is not now. I would get married later this year. It was meant to be a secret but I don't know how everybody has heard.

"I just hope 'bad bele' people would not jinx the marriage for me and make the girl that wants to marry me change her mind. She is the same girl I spoke about with you during our last interview.

"I cannot explain how the girl captured my heart but everyone would find out on the D-Day. I don't want to share the identity of my wife now. When the time comes, people would know who she is," Denrele said.


They Didn't Want To Sit Near Him, But They Were Shocked To Learn Who He Is

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This short film has a very powerful message. A family arrives at the hospital, to follow up with the doctor after their daughter underwent a bone marrow transplant operation.

While waiting outside the doctor's office, they notice a 'strange man' waiting as well. But something is amiss with the family.

Rather than sit next to the man, the family chooses to sit away from the man. In fact, the father even stands so that his wife and daughter can avoid being near him.

But watch as they are shocked when the doctor makes a stunning revelation. (If you can't see the video, click here.)

China 'Negotiates Military Base' In Djibouti

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Ismail Omar Guelleh.
China is negotiating a military base in a strategic port of Djibouti, the president said, according to the AFP news agency.

The move raises the prospect of US and Chinese bases side-by-side in the tiny Horn of Africa nation.

"Discussions are ongoing," President Ismail Omar Guelleh said in an interview in Djibouti, saying Beijing's presence would be "welcome".

The AFP did not say when the interview was conducted.

Djibouti is already home to Camp Lemonnier, the US military headquarters on the continent, used for covert, anti-terror and other operations in Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere across Africa.

France and Japan also have bases in the port, a former French colony that guards the entrance to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal, and which has been used by European and other international navies as a base in the fight against piracy from neighbouring Somalia.

China is already financing several major infrastructure projects estimated to total more than $9bn, including improved ports, airports and railway lines to landlocked Ethiopia, for which Djibouti is a lifeline port.

"France's presence is old, and the Americans found that the position of Djibouti could help in the fight against terrorism in the region," Guelleh said.

"The Japanese want to protect themselves from piracy - and now the Chinese also want to protect their interests, and they are welcome," he said.

Djibouti overseas the narrow Bab al-Mandeb straits, the channel separating Africa from Arabia and one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world, leading into the Red Sea and northwards to the Mediterranean.

Djibouti and Beijing signed a military agreement allowing the Chinese navy to use Djibouti port in February 2014, a move that angered Washington.

China aims to install a permanent military base in Obock, Djibouti's northern port city.

In recent years, Guelleh has increasingly turned to China as a key economic partner. Last year he switched the port operating contract to a Chinese company, after the previous Dubai-based operator was accused of corruption.

By Al Jazeera

Renewed Clashes In South Sudan Force Thousands To Flee

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Fighting has escalated in war-torn South Sudan forcing up to 100,000 people to flee their homes, the United Nations has said.

Toby Lanzer, the UN's humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan said up to 100,000 people had been displaced from their homes in Unity State, as clashes intensifed between rebels and government troops.

"Since the beginning of May, military activities south of Bentiu in Unity state have forced up to 100,000 people from their homes," Lanzer said in a statement.

"People should never be harmed, and certainly not targeted or forced to flee from their homes," he added.

Also on Saturday, two global aid agencies evacuated their international staff from part of Unity State fearing clashes.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said they withdrew from the town of Leer, Machar's hometown, over concerns of an "imminent attack."

"Today, we withdraw again with a heavy heart, because we know how civilians will suffer when they are cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care," Paul Critchley, head of mission at Doctors Without Borders said.

MSF was previously forced to abandon Leer in January last year when fighting over the town made it too dangerous to stay.

When aid workers were able to return four months later they found the hospital burned and looted and vehicles stolen.

Franz Rauchenstein, the head of the ICRC in South Sudan, urged the warring sides to respect international law.

"At all times, those who do not take part in the hostilities must be spared and the distinction needs to be made between civilian objectives and military objectives," he said.

Violence in the world's youngest nation has been characterised by rape, attacks on civilians and medical facilities and ethnic massacres.

Tens of thousands of people are believed to have been killed since South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011.

By Al Jazeera

Photos: Femi Kuti, Kate Henshaw, Funke Akindele, Others Party With Tunde & Wunmi Obe At Their Mansion

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Celebrity couple, Tunde and Wunmi Obe are presently playing host to superstars Femi Kuti, Kate Henshaw, Funke Akindele, Dare Art Alade and DJ Jimmy Jatt at an exclusive event for their entertainment industry colleagues at their home.

The celebrities have gathered to celebrate with the couple on the launch of their latest album, T.W.O PLUS.

Other Guests Include Dele Esan, Essence, Funke Kuti, Gbemi Olateru Olagbegi, Kenny Saint Brown, Labi Olayori, Ras Kimono,Yeni Kuti, Tony Okoroji, Tosyn Bucknor and Yinka Davies. A host of celebrity guests are still expected to join in the fun tonight.

The party promises to be a night of fun, champagne, barbecue and lots of music.


















Revealed: How 19-Year-Old Boy Hypnotizes Ladies With Ring

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Chukwuebuka (pictured left).
Detectives in Nsukka Command of Nigeria Police Force, Enugu State, were dumb-founded, recently, with the startling confessions of a 19-year-old drop-out over his exploits with ladies using a strange ring. The suspect, Chukwuebuka Ani, confessed that he uses ring to attract young girls and married women.

Details Of His Exploits

Narrating his incredible exploits, the suspect who was arrested by members of a vigilante group following his suspicious movement at Umabor village in Opi, Nsukka Local Government Area, after he fled from his village, confessed that he was initiated into the secret cult by his friend at Community Primary School, Isiagu, Awka, Anambra State who gave him biscuits and sachet water during break time.

According to him, at night, that my friend appeared and asked me to follow him. Unknown to me, the biscuit and water he gave me earlier had automatically initiated me into their cult. He took me to a lady he identified as Amarachi Eze, who lives in a four-storey building in Awka.

Hypnotises Women With Ring

“The lady told me that I should never disclose to anybody what I saw. She used her finger nail to give me a mark on the chest and she licked the blood that came out from the mark. She then asked me to be visiting her on a weekly basis. Each time I visited, she will compel me to make love to her. After that, she will give me N5,000.00. She was also paying me N15,000.00 every month and she gave me two rings which I use to attract girls. However, I was forbidden from making love to harlots in brothels.”

Cult Membership After S*x

Chukwuebuka stated that he was in that game for over three years and each time he tried to escape from the cult, the lady will threaten to kill him, pointing out that he has reported to the police but he ended up being detained for days while the lady will still come to release him and request for s*x.

“She will also direct me to continue to initiate more people. I found out that any girl I had intercourse with, will automatically become a member of our cult group. Also, I discovered that once I insert the ring in my mouth, anything I tell somebody must be accepted and obeyed to the last letter.

Suicide Attempt

At a stage, I was fed up with the whole thing and I was thinking of committing suicide. However, when I remembered that I am the only child of my peasant parents, I chose the option of returning back home to fend for my self. While at home, I could not afford to pay for my secondary education. I decided to learn how to repair generator and barbing.

Unfortunately, after I was freed, I could still not afford to be on my own due to lack of funds to purchase working tools. In spite of my decision to return home and turn a new leaf, I still did not discard the evil rings. I kept on using it to make love to a good number of girls and married women that crossed my way. There were so many that I can not identify them. I was only interested in having fun and initiating them into the group as directed by the lady, Amarachi.”

Tango With Homo-S*xauals

“One man who is a gay approached me at a certain joint, bought few things for me, gave me his complimentary card, and asked me to come to Abuja if I am interested that he will give me N100,000 for love tango in one of the best hotels. The complimentary card is with the police. I cannot remember the man’s name but if the police can give out the card, you will see his name. One other gay lover, Ifeanyi at Ugwuoba in Anambra State, is in prison now.

He has defiled many young boys. Ifeanyi claims to be a Pastor but he is a well known homo-s*xual in the area who defiled one small boy and was imprisoned about two or three months ago. He has many shops, barbing saloons, film rentals among others which he uses to entice young boys and perfect his illicit acts.”

How He Came To Nsukka

“One day, I just decided to move out of the village. I came to Gariki, Awkunanaw motor park in Enugu and joined Peace Mass Transit to Nsukka. When the vehicle reached Opi junction, some people dropped and I decided to follow as I have never been to Nsukka before. When I came down, I saw a barbing saloon and entered there. Some boys were chatting inside. I told one of them called Chinedu that I was looking for a wife to marry.

He laughed at me and said he could not help out. It was getting late and I pleaded to pass the night with him and he obliged my request. I followed him to their house and on entering the compound, one elderly woman inquired from him who he was coming with. Soon after the woman left us, she entered their room and I over heard her chanting some incantations. Few seconds later, she came out and branded me a thief, kidnapper, ritualist, 419, s*x maniac and cultist, unknown to me that the woman is a herbalist.

She, thereafter, invited the local vigilante group to arrest and interrogate me with a view to finding out my mission in their community. I was roughly manhandled before they invited the police who equally tortured me to find out the exact fact of my mission. I fabricated lies to enable the police leave me but all the things I said did not go down well with them. They then took me to the Area Command headquarters in Nsukka town.”

Police Advice

A competent senior police officer who spoke with Crime Guard over the startling revelations by the suspect, advised young boys and girls to be careful with the kind of friends they keep, both at school and outside their homes pointing out that investigations are on going to unravel the authenticity of the sordid story and if possible arrest the wicked women who is the leader of the cult.

By Vanguard's Chinenye Ozor
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