Saturday, August 11, 2012

NigerianEye: REVEALED: Meet Barack Obama's Brother, who lives in a ghetto in Kenya

REVEALED: Meet Barack Obama's Brother, who lives in a ghetto in Kenya

George Hussein Obama, the half-brother of the most famous man in the world, pictured in the Nairobi slum he calls home

As a tall, strangely familiar figure leaves his one-room shack in a notorious African slum this week, a few people jokingly call out to him: ‘Mister President! Mister President!’


Heading for breakfast through his junk-strewn yard, stepping over streams of sewage, the appearance of this slim, angular man prompts giggles and pointing from children in rags playing in the muck.


The man’s name is George Hussein Obama and his half-brother is Barack Hussein Obama, Kenya’s most famous son, the first black President of the U.S. and the most powerful man in the world.
George Hussein Obama in Nairobi: The half brother of Barack Obama has agreed to appear in a documentary which is critical of the U.S. President
George Hussein Obama in Nairobi: The half brother of Barack Obama has agreed to appear in a documentary which is critical of the U.S. President

The two men may share the same father, but while Barack Obama was born in Hawaii to his father’s American second wife, George — born in Kenya — was the product of Obama Senior’s fourth marriage.
Today, while Barack entertains at the White House, flies aboard Air Force One and is a friend of film stars and royalty, George, 30, is to be found slumped in his corrugated iron shack which even fellow slum-dwellers regard as a hovel.

Details of his unorthodox lifestyle emerged with news that he has agreed to appear in a documentary film being made by one of Barack Obama’s most trenchant critics.
Called 2016, and directed by the production team behind Schindler’s List, the film sets out the supposed horrors of another four years of Obama in office — though George does not criticise the President on screen. It is the idea of U.S. author Dinesh D’Souza, whose book The Roots Of Obama’s Rage paints a deeply unflattering portrait of the ‘narcissistic’ President.


George Hussein Obama George now spends his time drinking what locals call Chang¿aa ¿ a spirit distilled with maize and spiked with chemicals ¿ from the moment he wakes to the moment he slips into unconsciousness
George Hussein Obama George now spends his time drinking what locals call Chang¿aa ¿ a spirit distilled with maize and spiked with chemicals ¿ from the moment he wakes to the moment he slips into unconsciousness
George Hussein Obama George now spends his time drinking what locals call Chang’aa — a spirit distilled with maize and spiked with chemicals — from the moment he wakes to the moment he slips into unconsciousness
Whilst his half-brother inhabits a desolate Kenyan slum, U.S. President Barack Obama, pictured during an election campaign rally in Colorado Springs, is firmly in the limelight
Whilst his half-brother inhabits a desolate Kenyan slum, U.S. President Barack Obama, pictured during an election campaign rally in Colorado Springs, is firmly in the limelight


George has also written a memoir, called Homeland. Published in 2012, it details how he turned his back on a middle-class Kenyan upbringing to live among the desperately poor in Nairobi’s infamous slums. The book’s precis tell us: ‘George chooses to live in the Nairobi ghetto, where he works to help the ghetto-dwellers, and especially the slum kids, overcome the challenges surrounding their lives.’

And the book quotes George thus: ‘My brother has risen to be the leader of the most powerful country in the world. Here in Kenya, my aim is to be a leader among the poorest people on Earth: those who live in the slums.’

Such, apparently, is his devotion to good works that many Kenyans want George to stand for President, believing anyone sharing the name and blood of the most powerful politician on the planet can transform their lives.
But, as I discovered, this may prove beyond George. Indeed, standing — let alone talking much sense or walking in a straight line — is tricky for the U.S. President’s brother much of the time, due to his chronic addiction to drink and years of drug abuse.

Nor is there anything heroic and altruistic about his motives for living in the slums. His principal reason is that the potent local moonshine is cheap and readily available here, as is cocaine, heroin and marijuana.
Clearly following the dictum that the best place to hide a tree is in a forest, George’s decision to settle in a slum called Huruma — which is scarred by alcoholism, drug addiction and violence — means his own destructive behaviour attracts little attention.

Although he claims not to be using heroin or cocaine, George now spends his time drinking what locals call Chang’aa — a spirit distilled with maize and spiked with chemicals — from the moment he wakes to the moment he slips into unconsciousness.
Laced with ethanol, embalming fluid or battery acid to give it more kick, this substance is regularly blamed for causing blindness and death when the criminal syndicates behind the trade mix it wrongly.

A glass costs about 10p and, after just five small shots, even hardened drinkers can barely remember their own name. Regular users suffer liver and kidney failure, as well as mental impairment known as ‘wet brain’.
George Hussein Obama says that his last name is a curse, but members of his community say that he trades on it shamelessly for alcohol and food
George Hussein Obama says that his last name is a curse, but members of his community say that he trades on it shamelessly for alcohol and food
Whilst Barack Obama enjoys all the perks which come with the role as U.S. President, his half-brother is caught in a spiral of chronic addiction to drink and drug abuse
Whilst Barack Obama enjoys all the perks which come with the role as U.S. President, his half-brother is caught in a spiral of chronic addiction to drink and drug abuse
Barack Obama and his father Barack Obama Sr. at Honolulu airport after the only meeting that the U.S. President can recall over Christmas in 1971
Barack Obama and his father Barack Obama Sr. at Honolulu airport after the only meeting that the U.S. President can recall over Christmas in 1971


When I track George down early one morning to find out about his life, he’s already been for a liquid breakfast at the nearest Chang’aa den, where sex with prostitutes is also on the menu in a bed kept at the back.
Introductions are made by George’s ‘security man’ — a red-eyed slum dweller and fellow heavy-drinker who drags George out of the den, shouting at him to come and see the ‘muzungu’ (white man) outside.

Then, after shaking hands, I make a mistake. I invite George to lunch at my hotel. For the next two days, he lays siege to my mini-bar, invites a succession of girlfriends and ‘security advisers’ to wine and dine at my expense, and behaves like he is a famous, spoilt celebrity.
He also repeatedly demands ‘kitu kidogo’ — Swahili for something small, which, of course, means something large and financial — and is appalled when I refuse to hand out cash to his assorted girlfriends.
President Barack Obama, pictured aboard Air Force One, is as far removed in the imagination as could be possible from his Kenyan relative
President Barack Obama, pictured aboard Air Force One, is as far removed in the imagination as could be possible from his Kenyan relative
The Huruma slum of Nairobi which is scarred by alcoholism, drug addiction and violence - and is where the President of the United States' brother lives in squalor
The Huruma slum of Nairobi which is scarred by alcoholism, drug addiction and violence - and is where the President of the United States' brother lives in squalor


Paradoxically, George also moans endlessly about the Obama name being a burden and a curse — yet, at the same time, unashamedly uses it to make as much money as possible to spend on drink and drugs.
‘People are only interested in me because of my brother,’ he sighs, slurping a double Johnnie Walker, with a beer chaser — one of many. ‘I hate it. People all want me to be someone else.’

George first met his now-famous sibling in a playground when he was at primary school. Barack was a young visitor to Nairobi just a few years after their father died in a car crash. George recalls he was playing football when his brother arrived to say hello.

The second time their paths crossed was when Obama — then a Senator — was on a tour of East Africa in 2006, and visited Nairobi to see his family. They shook hands — the two utterly different worlds they inhabited coming together under the African sun.
‘He is an inspiration,’ George observes. ‘We have met a couple of times. We do speak . . . he is my brother.’
President Barack Obama holding a Cabinet meeting in the White House last month, has been feted as an inspiration by George Obama
President Barack Obama holding a Cabinet meeting in the White House last month, has been feted as an inspiration by George Obama


As for the President, he mentions George in his autobiography Dreams From My Father, saying he is a ‘beautiful boy’, but admits that when they met as adults in Kenya ‘it was like meeting a complete stranger’.
George says, apparently without a shred of self-awareness, that he is under pressure to follow his older brother’s footsteps into politics. ‘I have got a lot of people telling me to stand as a member of parliament. But I’m not interested in politics.’

Then he pauses, and adds: ‘But if Barack was President, and I was president of Kenya it would be easier to meet.’ He says it is only his poverty that prevents the two of them having a closer relationship.

‘He’s got responsibilities. He’s not supposed to take care of me,’ he says. ‘I’m an adult. Everyone thinks he sends me cash. But I’m not a beggar.’ But asked if he’d take cash if Obama offered it, George smiled and said:‘Seriously! Yes! Who wouldn’t?’
Though he is consumed with self-pity about his plight, he is, officially, the co-ordinator of Huruma Football Club, a township team made up of orphans, former prisoners and reformed drug addicts.
Residents of Nairobi's Huruma move along the filthy streets of the dangerous slum
Residents of Nairobi's Huruma move along the filthy streets of the dangerous slum
Despite sharing the same surname and father, President Obama's surroundings in the Oval Office differ vastly from the Kenyan slum inhabited by his half-brother
Despite sharing the same surname and father, President Obama's surroundings in the Oval Office differ vastly from the Kenyan slum inhabited by his half-brother


This is just a title. In reality, he spends virtually every day getting drunk or sleeping off the effects. So where did it all go wrong for the 30-year-old? Of course, George is following in something of a family tradition: the father he and the President share was also a notorious drunk and habitué of township Chang’aa bars.

He, too, had a good start in life. Born into a poor family near Lake Victoria, the brothers’ father — also Barack — was a brilliant student. He became the first African to win a scholarship at a prestigious university in Hawaii.

It was on the American island that Barack Snr met Ann Dunham, an American academic and anthropologist. Despite the fact he was already married to a woman in Kenya, he claimed, dishonestly, that he was divorced. He married Ann in 1961 when she was already three months pregnant with Barack. But when Obama Snr pursued his studies at Harvard, he continued to have affairs — and split from Ann in 1964.

Eventually, he returned to Kenya — leaving Barack in Hawaii — and his heavy drinking spiralled out of control: after fathering George to his fourth wife Jael in Kenya, he died six months after the birth in a car crash in 1982.
George grew up in a middle-class Nairobi suburb with his mother, who married again, to a white man, a French aid worker — a fact he blames for his subsequent rebellion. ‘I was the only guy with a white father in my street. I wanted to be the same as the other black kids,’ he says.
Despite his brother's role as American President, George Obama says that he has no interest in politics
Despite his brother's role as American President, George Obama says that he has no interest in politics


Drinking and smoking marijuana by the age of ten, five years later he was thrown out of boarding school, where he played rugby and learned foreign languages, for taking drugs.
He admits that after becoming addicted to cocaine and heroin at 17, he became an armed robber to pay for drink and drugs. Living with his ‘black brothers’ on the streets, he was jailed in 2003, accused of playing a part in an attempted armed robbery.
Held on remand for nine months before being acquitted for lack of evidence, George claims his spell behind bars changed him. ‘It was hell on earth — literally,’ he tells me. ‘You either come out of there worse, or you change for the better. I changed. I wanted to help other people.’
Of course, George is not the only Obama sibling to have tried drugs. President Obama was a habitual drug-user in his teens and 20s. He tried cocaine. He was also a member of the ‘Choom Gang’ — slang for a group of dope smokers who used to drive round Hawaii getting stoned.

At college in Hawaii, Barack had regarded himself as a ‘cat’ — a cool character. Known as Barry, he was also notorious for ‘intercepting’ — grabbing a joint when it’s not your turn and taking a puff. The Honolulu Advertiser reported that Obama’s High School picture ‘prominently displayed . . . a package of ‘Zigzag’ rolling papers — used to make marijuana joints — and a matchbook.’

In his autobiography, Barack Obama revealed that he ‘got high [to] push questions of who I was out of my mind’ — a reference to his own difficult relationship with his talented, but wayward, father. ‘Junkie. Pothead,’ he wrote. ‘That’s where I’d been headed: the final, fatal role of the young would-be black man.’
Then U.S. Senator Barack Obama holds his step-grandmother Sarah Hussein Onyango Obama upon his returned to his ancestral rural village, Kogelo in August 2006
Then U.S. Senator Barack Obama holds his step-grandmother Sarah Hussein Onyango Obama upon his returned to his ancestral rural village, Kogelo in August 2006


Excited Sarah Hussein Obara, hugs then Senator Barack Obama in 2006 when they met after 17 years at his ancestral home in Nyangoma village in Siaya , about 500km West of Nairobi in Kenya
Excited Sarah Hussein Obara, hugs then Senator Barack Obama in 2006 when they met after 17 years at his ancestral home in Nyangoma village in Siaya , about 500km West of Nairobi in Kenya
Family portraits showing President Barack Obama (back row 2nd from left) that hang in his family house in Kogelo, western Kenya
Family portraits showing President Barack Obama (back row 2nd from left) that hang in his family house in Kogelo, western Kenya
Stanley Ann Dunham with her son Barack Obama in Hawaii during the mmid-1960s
Stanley Ann Dunham with her son Barack Obama in Hawaii during the mmid-1960s. Who knew back then than he would become the first black President of America?


Yet Barack escaped his father’s curse. The turning point came one night when, after a college party involving drink and drugs, a female friend scolded him for being self-obsessed and told the future U.S. President that life ‘isn’t just about you’.
He gave up drugs, vowing not to repeat the mistakes of his father. Sadly, there seems little hope of a similar ending for George.
The money from his book — reputed to have been an eight million Kenyan shilling advance (£61,000) — went on drink, drugs and a two-month sojourn with his hangers-on in Mombasa, the country’s stunning beach resort.

And despite his claims that he chooses to stay in his one-room shack, he is only there because he has spent all his money. Friends tell me he used to live in a much bigger house in a better area, and is given the room in Huruma now for free out of charity because he is down on his luck.

All the people in the township know George as a drunk, for all his claims to be a practising Muslim, and friends have urged him to seek help. ‘He’s a madman, really ill, but he doesn’t know he is,’ says Tony, from the football club. ‘He’s in black-out most of the time. We hope the Obama name will help our area. But George seems cursed.’
Obama's opponents are sure to aim to make political capital from the revelations about his half-brother
Obama's opponents are sure to aim to make political capital from the revelations about his half-brother

Sure enough, when we meet the next day, George is drunk and obnoxious after another breakfast of kill-me-quick — slang for Chang’aa.
Shamir, his two-year-old son, born to one of his string of girlfriends, wanders into the Chang’aa den and sits beside me. We do high-fives. George slumps in a seat opposite, saying: ‘It’s all b*****ks, b*****ks, b*****ks, b*****ks.’
He lurches off and disappears in the maze of shacks and alleys, swallowed up by the slum. His son is taken to be looked after by local women.

Whether or not addiction is genetic, George Obama — like the dead father he shares with the U.S. President — suffers in its gruesome embrace.
What’s certain is that what money he has won’t last. Nor will much of it go to township orphans or ‘Obama’s champs’. It will go on kill-me-quick and who knows what else.
Perhaps, tragically, before many more years pass, another little Kenyan boy called Obama is destined to grow up with nothing more than dreams of his father.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

American rapper Snoop Dogg changes name to Snoop Lion, to release Reggee Album

American rapper Snoop Dogg changes name to Snoop Lion, to release Reggee Album


American rapper, Snoop Dogg says he was "born again" during a visit to Jamaica in January, and he has decided to change his name to 'Snoop Lion' and he is ready to make music that his "kids and grandparents can listen to." in a news conference in New York yesterday.



The former gangster rapper is releasing a reggae album called "Reincarnated" in the fall. He said that in Jamaica, he connected with Bob Marley's spirit and is now "Bob Marley reincarnated."

Bob Marley's son Rohan attended the conference and gave Snoop his blessing.

"I feel like I've always been Rastafarian," Snoop said of the spiritual Jamaican movement. While there, he said, he visited a temple, was renamed Snoop Lion and was also given the Ethiopian name Berhane, meaning "light of the world."

Snoop didn't explain why he was switching from "Dogg" to "Lion," but it's likely a reference to the Lion of Judah, a religious symbol popular in Rastafarian and Ethiopian culture.

Later, he played five songs for a small crowd, including one called "No Guns Allowed." It features his daughter and includes the lyrics, "No guns allowed in here tonight, we're going to have a free for all, no fights."

"It's so tragic that people are doing stupid things with guns," he said.

Snoop, best known for hits like "Gin and Juice" and "Drop It Like It's Hot," is an avid supporter of marijuana rights and has been banned from entering Norway for two years after trying to enter the country with a small amount last month.

He said that in Jamaica, where he stayed for 35 days, he grew closer to his wife, who saw his transition. He added that he's excited to perform music that his family and children can listen to.

"As a 40-year-old man ... I've got to give them something," he said. "That's what you do when you're wise."

Snoop Dogg said he's not completely retiring from hip-hop but is "tired" of the genre because it is no longer challenging.

"Reggae was calling ... it's a breath of fresh air," he said. "Rap isn't challenging; it's not appealing."
The album was produced by Diplo and will feature Snoop singing. It will be released on Vice Records.

The album will be followed with a documentary of the same name, also produced by Vice. It features Snoop making music and will include some personal elements of his life, a producer of the film said.

 It will debut at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

A coffee table book about Snoop's rebirth is also in the works.

"It feels like I'm 19 or 20 years old again," he said.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

PHOTO: Woman Sentenced For Kidnapping Baby From Hospital in 1987

PHOTO: Woman Sentenced For Kidnapping Baby From Hospital in 1987
Ann Pettway, Baby Kidnapper
Ann Pettway, the 50-year old woman who snatched a newborn from a hospital more than two decades ago and raised the child as her own, has been sentenced to 12 years in prison by a judge. She plead guilty to the charges of kidnapping, and described how she (in 1987) took a train from her Connecticut home to the hospital, and posed as a nurse. After kidnapping a baby, she raised the child for 20 years as her own.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Man Molests his own daughter for 28Yrs. got her Pregnant 3 times

Man Molests his own daughter for 28Yrs. got her Pregnant 3 times
A 56-year-old man has been arrested by the police in West Virgina for fathering three children with his daughter.

It was gathered that the man had been involved in an incestuous relationship with his own daughter for the past 28 years.



The daughter, who is now 35, told police investigators that her father started abusing her since the age of 7. It was revealed that she gave birth to three kids for her father when she was 14, 19 and 20.
The children of the man’s incestuous relationship with his daughters are now aged 21, 16 and 15. 

Monday, June 4, 2012

Plane Crash in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, 153 people feared dead

BREAKING NEWS: Plane Crash in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, 153 people feared dead


Just 24 hours after a Nigerian cargo plane crashed in Ghana, a plane belonging to Dana Airlines crashed at the Iju/Ishaga area of Lagos yesterday evening. 
CONTINUE TO SCROLL DOWN FOR LATEST UPDATES
The plane was carrying 152 passengers from Abuja to Lagos. Eye witnesses say human beings are burning at the scene of the crash.

NigerianEye gathered that the plane crashed into a two-story building in the Iju-ishaga area of  Lagos.
Femi Oke-Osanyinpolu, Lagos state emergency state manager, said Sunday that casualty numbers are unknown.






LATEST UPDATES:
  • At 12am on Monday morning, rescue efforts still continued at the crash site in darkness in the absence of electricity
  • Minister of Information, Labaran Makun said the Federal Government has ordered a full-scale investigation into the Dana Air Crash that claimed the lives of over 150 people

  • Former NTA Sunday show host and Group General Manager,Corporate Affairs of Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, Levi Ajuonuma was among the passengers involved in the Dana airline crash as Confirmed by the NNPC.

  • The Dana plane is said to have collapsed on Four buildings including a church.

  • Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah is currently at the site of the crash and she has told reporters that full investigation is going on

  • Dana Airlines Flight: 0992 declared emergency at 11 nautical miles to Lima Alfa gulf before eventually crashing

  • Residents said thety saw the Plane coming Low with full speed, making a loud noise as it slammed into the residential area
  • 10 bodies have been recovered from the 2-storey building with 4 others unconscious...

  • Relatives of the Ill-fated Dana Air flight besiege Abuja Airport

  • Ehime Aikhomu, son of former Chief of General Staff, Admiral Augustus Aikhomu confirmed to be on the ill-fated Dana Air flight

  • Nigerian Musician Iyanya Mbuk revealed on his twitter page that he missed the flight
Update: A Dana Air representative has confirmed to NigerianEye that the plane carrying 153 passengers which crashed at the Iju area of Lagos State, indeed belonged to the airline.


Update:  Update: the DG of NCAA, Harold Demurin has sadly confirmed that none of the passengers on board the crashed Dana Airplane Survived

Update: Situation report at Muritala Mohammed Airport, where family and friends gather together waiting for the Passengers of the Dana Flight, they are wailing uncontrollably.

The affected building at Popoola street, off Toye Junction, Iju Lagos.
Crash Site in Iju, Lagos

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Meet the World's Oldest Prostitutes: 69 Years-old Twins, Louise and Martine

 Meet the World's Oldest Prostitutes: 69 Years-old Twins, Louise and Martine
Meet the World's Oldest Prostitutes: 69 Years-old Twins, Louise and Martine

Meet the Fokkens
A candid documentary about a pair of 69-year-old prostitute twin sisters is to make its debut at New York's Film Forum festival this summer.

Louise and Martine, who are veterans of Amsterdam's famous Red Light District and have a century of experience between them, star in Meet the Fokkens.



In a trailer, released yesterday, they describe how times have changed since they started their career in the early Sixties, and how they feel about the public perception of their trade.

Comparing the early days of the prostitution world with the present day, she recalls: 'In the old days, the local copper would tap on the window if a girl was showing too much ankle, now the girls deal coke from their cubicles.'


Louise explains that arthritis forced her to retire two years ago, because she 'couldn’t get one leg over the other' - though her sister continues to work.

Meet the Fokkens
Intimate insight: The pair describe how times have changed since they started their career in the early Sixties, and how they feel about the public perception of their trade


Meet the Fokkens
Double act: Louise and Martine dance in matching dresses outside their Amsterdam home

'My twin sister is still working in her old age,' she says. 'She needs the money. You can't live off a state pension.'

The trailer then shows a scene in which Martine is preparing herself for a job. She is seen calling out to her unseen client: 'I'm almost there... Did you hear me?'


An anonymous voice replies: 'Yes mistress,' to which she responds: 'Good Boy.'


The sisters can also be seen browsing a display of vibrators together in a sex shop, discussing the quality of the products on offer, and how they might use them.


Meet the Fokkens
Riveting story: The sisters tell how they freed themselves from the control of their pimps, ran their own brothel, and set up the first informal trade union for prostitutes
Still working: Martine remains a practising prostitute as she needs the money. Her sister, who stopped due to her arthritis, points out: 'You can't live off a state pension'
Still working: Martine remains a practising prostitute as she needs the money. Her sister, who stopped due to her arthritis, points out: 'You can't live off a state pension'


One says: 'This one vibrates and it's nice.' The other replies: 'This vibrates even better. You can hold it against the penis.'


The documentary, which will go on general release in the U.S. this autumn, also relates a more serious story: how the Fokkens sisters freed themselves from the control of their pimps, ran their own brothel, and set up the first informal trade union for prostitutes.

Directors Gabriëlle Provaas and Rob Schröde told ABC News: 'This is the story we wanted to tell.

'Louise and Martine are real old-fashioned Amsterdam hookers: liberated, cheerful and not scared of anybody.'