Joey Barton has told the BBC that he believes gambling is "culturally ingrained" in English football and that as many as half of all players would fall foul of betting rules.
The 35-year-old ex-England midfielder is serving a 13-month ban for breaking the Football Association's betting rules after admitting placing bets on 1,260 matches.
The FA tightened its regulations in 2014 to stop players in England's top eight divisions betting on any football-related activity, anywhere in the world.
Barton, who will be able to play again from June 1, concedes he was right to be punished -- but claims he is far from the only professional footballer to have been in clear breach of the FA's rules.
The former Manchester City and Burnley midfielder also insists the issue runs deep in English football.
"I think, and I'm being conservative, I think 50 percent of the playing staff would be taken out [banned], because it's culturally ingrained," Barton told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. "You'd have half the players out for sure."
He added: "I had to be sanctioned, because I stepped out of the boundaries of the rules. So there's no doubt about it, but the FA think I'm the only footballer who has ever bet on football ever
"But the reality of it says that that is not the case. I've seen [it] with my own eyes.
"I'd place bets for other footballers on my accounts. I would say, on a conservative estimate, being in professional dressing rooms where there's been readily available cash for over 15 years, you'd have half the league out."
Barton says the reason for that is because of the change in regulations.
He also believes it is important to distinguish between gambling rules and match-fixing rules.
He said: "The [gambling] rules have become more and more stringent. Ultimately we've ended up now with a totalitarian kind of ban -- no football betting anywhere.
"Where we've got it wrong is we've got the gambling rules mixed up with the match-fixing rules.
"Because match-fixing is fundamentally wrong and challenges the integrity of the sport.
"I think culturally betting is acceptable. There's nothing wrong with betting if it's controlled -- it's when it becomes out of control and people bet beyond their means."
Tuesday, 23 January 2018
Our best players are in Europe
I was tempted to title this week’s column ‘’Let’s boo Claude Puel.’’ I changed my mind because he isn’t well known. I pitied Puel since he is a stop-gap coach, who is on trial and doesn’t have the technical know-how to handle an innately gifted lad such as Nigerian international Kelechi Iheanacho. I can imagine the mental torture Puel subjected Iheanacho to as if Manchester City’s former manager made a mistake in recruiting the former Golden Eaglets star. Perhaps, there is the need to remind Puel that Iheanacho was the best player at the FIFA U-17 World Cup. He beat other players, including those from Europe. Iheanacho couldn’t suddenly become a bad player. But what do you expect from a coach who was suddenly sacked by Southampton?
I just hope that Puel isn’t just biased given the way he pulled out Iheanacho from the Fleetwood Town game in the 80th minute. With the way the game was going, only Iheanacho could have scored for Leicester on Tuesday night. More experienced coaches would have left the Nigerian on the pitch to see if he would score a hat-trick, which could have helped his confidence. Not so with Puel, who must have been under pressure to justify his preference for Japanese Shinji Okazaki.
On a level platform, especially with what Iheanacho exhibited, Puel will do better, if he finds a role for the Nigerian. Puel is fixated about Mahrez and Vardy. But Iheanacho’s intelligence and runs off the ball give him the edge over Okazaki. If Iheanacho gets the playing time Okazaki has, he will score more goals.
Indeed, in a post-match interview on Tuesday, Iheanacho said: “You don’t need to get frustrated. Stick together and work hard every day. If the chance comes, you take it. That slowed things down a little bit. I am happy I am getting to come back. I am feeling better, stronger and working hard in training every day to progress. I hope I will have a very successful and injury-free second part of the season.
“I am fit now and confident. We have so many more games to come. Keep working hard, and keep playing and help the team to achieve. Fans have seen a bit of me, I hope to continue like that in the future and in the games to come.
“The first part of the season is gone and it is the second part now. I am happy to get the two goals and now hope to progress in the future. It gives me more confidence to play well, get back in the team and help them achieve great things in the future,” said Iheanacho.
That is the spirit, dear Iheanacho. Keep training with all the vigour required, knowing that the Russia 2018 World Cup is the platform to showcase your talent and get bigger clubs with experienced coaches to free you from the Leicester bondage. What you did against Fleetwood shows that you are not a finished product nor did you waste Leicester’s money.
Ahmed Musa left Kano Pillars as the best in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) to the home of beautiful football, Netherlands. His exploits took him to Russia from where he joined Leicester City after dominating the league.
However, some players weren’t happy with the huge fee paid for his services and that led to the sack of Italian Claudio Ranieri. Today, Musa is hardly on the match-day squads for the Foxes – not because he is a bad player but because clueless Puel won’t give him a chance.
If Iheanacho had not scored in the FA Cup third round replay against Fleetwood, perhaps, the manager would’ve justified why he left him on the bench since he arrived in October 2017. What is the manager’s reaction to Iheanacho’s performance? Interesting.
“Kelechi showed a good attitude, worked hard for his teammates and got between the lines. His first goal showed a lot of quality and the second was a fantastic move between him and Mahrez,” Puel told the club’s official website. Can you beat that? So, Puel, why did you not allow Iheanacho complete the game, when he was the best player on the pitch? What did Vardy and Okazaki do better than Iheanacho when they came in? Nothing. Leicester’s game went down.
Until Tuesday night, the argument was on the essence of inviting Iheanacho and Ahmed Musa to Nigeria’s World Cup camp if they aren’t playing for their clubs. What we have seen from Iheanacho’s case is that he is a victim of a manager’s warp selection. I always knew that but needed such feats as Iheanacho’s to stress that we need not judge our players by their club performances, especially when it comes to vying for shirts with their host country’s indigenous star. Not in a World Cup year, as such a country is also billed to participate. Our players must consider these variables in picking clubs they want to play for.
Watching the CHAN Eagles play a draw against Rwanda was boring. Most fans hissed all through the game, making the argument that the players were unlucky not to have won the game laughable, given the pedigree of the two countries in world football. Not one player in the team showed any trait of being capable to handle World Cup matches. Those in Morocco are upstarts. Even if Nigeria wins the trophy, none of them, except the goalkeeper, Ikechukwu Ezenwa, can get a World Cup shirt. It is clear now that our best players are in Europe, with the way borderline players such as Iheanacho played on Tuesday night.
Advocates of having a Nigerian handler for the Super Eagles during big competitions such as the World Cup always talk about using the domestic league to judge the development of the game in Nigeria. Their submissions are laced with sentiments and patriotism, which don’t add up to growth when we are pitched against the rest of the world.
Football isn’t as simple as kicking the round object around the field by 22 players for 90 minutes. Players’ skills and how they go about interpreting the instructions given to them by the coaches are sacrosanct. Where the coaches’ technical savvy is obtuse and dense, it reflects in how the boys play the game, which the greatest Edson Arantes do Nascimento once described as beautiful.
Watching the Nigerian team groomed by our coaches can be boring and frustrating. Our game isn’t exciting, not because the players lack the skills. The players are as good as the coaches. Our domestic players lack the basic rudiments of the game, such as controlling the ball and making good passes that could lead to goals. Besides, our playing pattern is laborious and lacks imagination, which make it not exciting.
The structure of the domestic league is faulty and incapable of producing the desired results, especially where the administrators think they are the best. Our domestic league administrators, including the regulators, are self-serving and myopic. They are easily hoodwinked by what is found outside the country, without looking at our peculiarities. No deliberate effort is made to train and re-train the coaches and the auxiliary staff, in a bid to improve the quality of skills impacted on the players at all levels. This is why watching the domestic league can be a nightmare.
Rather than evolve a system that would enhance the growth of the game at the grassroots, our administrators prefer to roam European countries looking for templates which create more problems for the system, when the initiators leave office. Globally, clubs are encouraged to have academies where the youngsters are taught the rudiments of the game. These rookies become the future stars of such big teams, with the exceptional ones going to bigger teams, which translates to big revenues for the teams they have left.
Unfortunately, our domestic clubs don’t think it is necessary to have youth teams. The management members have refused to see the league as a business. Rather than fashion how their teams can attract the fans to watch their matches, they are contented with taking government money.
No investor will do the business of sports where the government holds over 70 per cent of its equity. The government, which owns most of the clubs, should encourage the team’s management to outsource their revenue. Sadly, the regulators of the domestic league like to err on the side of caution instead of enforcing the rules that encourage commercialisation of clubs’ operation, with particular reference of taking them to the Nigeria Stock Exchange.
If it means having only five clubs which satisfy the rules of running as a professional outfit, let the league matches begin. With time, others will take it seriously and do what is required to qualify as a professional team. This idea of clubs owing their players and coaches wages of over nine months is cruel. Equally worrisome is the manner in which some governors whose states own the clubs behave towards them as if they are doing the players and coaches a favour by paying them as and when due.
It was quite appalling to watch how a particular governor allowed his security operatives to manhandle players, especially the girls who stormed the Government House in a peaceful protest. They were beaten groggy and made to look like criminals, not sports ambassadors of the state, which is what they are. Don’t remind me that nothing is happening to the governor. Elsewhere, the ignoble act would cost him his future in politics.
I just hope that Puel isn’t just biased given the way he pulled out Iheanacho from the Fleetwood Town game in the 80th minute. With the way the game was going, only Iheanacho could have scored for Leicester on Tuesday night. More experienced coaches would have left the Nigerian on the pitch to see if he would score a hat-trick, which could have helped his confidence. Not so with Puel, who must have been under pressure to justify his preference for Japanese Shinji Okazaki.
On a level platform, especially with what Iheanacho exhibited, Puel will do better, if he finds a role for the Nigerian. Puel is fixated about Mahrez and Vardy. But Iheanacho’s intelligence and runs off the ball give him the edge over Okazaki. If Iheanacho gets the playing time Okazaki has, he will score more goals.
Indeed, in a post-match interview on Tuesday, Iheanacho said: “You don’t need to get frustrated. Stick together and work hard every day. If the chance comes, you take it. That slowed things down a little bit. I am happy I am getting to come back. I am feeling better, stronger and working hard in training every day to progress. I hope I will have a very successful and injury-free second part of the season.
“I am fit now and confident. We have so many more games to come. Keep working hard, and keep playing and help the team to achieve. Fans have seen a bit of me, I hope to continue like that in the future and in the games to come.
“The first part of the season is gone and it is the second part now. I am happy to get the two goals and now hope to progress in the future. It gives me more confidence to play well, get back in the team and help them achieve great things in the future,” said Iheanacho.
That is the spirit, dear Iheanacho. Keep training with all the vigour required, knowing that the Russia 2018 World Cup is the platform to showcase your talent and get bigger clubs with experienced coaches to free you from the Leicester bondage. What you did against Fleetwood shows that you are not a finished product nor did you waste Leicester’s money.
Ahmed Musa left Kano Pillars as the best in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) to the home of beautiful football, Netherlands. His exploits took him to Russia from where he joined Leicester City after dominating the league.
However, some players weren’t happy with the huge fee paid for his services and that led to the sack of Italian Claudio Ranieri. Today, Musa is hardly on the match-day squads for the Foxes – not because he is a bad player but because clueless Puel won’t give him a chance.
If Iheanacho had not scored in the FA Cup third round replay against Fleetwood, perhaps, the manager would’ve justified why he left him on the bench since he arrived in October 2017. What is the manager’s reaction to Iheanacho’s performance? Interesting.
“Kelechi showed a good attitude, worked hard for his teammates and got between the lines. His first goal showed a lot of quality and the second was a fantastic move between him and Mahrez,” Puel told the club’s official website. Can you beat that? So, Puel, why did you not allow Iheanacho complete the game, when he was the best player on the pitch? What did Vardy and Okazaki do better than Iheanacho when they came in? Nothing. Leicester’s game went down.
Until Tuesday night, the argument was on the essence of inviting Iheanacho and Ahmed Musa to Nigeria’s World Cup camp if they aren’t playing for their clubs. What we have seen from Iheanacho’s case is that he is a victim of a manager’s warp selection. I always knew that but needed such feats as Iheanacho’s to stress that we need not judge our players by their club performances, especially when it comes to vying for shirts with their host country’s indigenous star. Not in a World Cup year, as such a country is also billed to participate. Our players must consider these variables in picking clubs they want to play for.
Watching the CHAN Eagles play a draw against Rwanda was boring. Most fans hissed all through the game, making the argument that the players were unlucky not to have won the game laughable, given the pedigree of the two countries in world football. Not one player in the team showed any trait of being capable to handle World Cup matches. Those in Morocco are upstarts. Even if Nigeria wins the trophy, none of them, except the goalkeeper, Ikechukwu Ezenwa, can get a World Cup shirt. It is clear now that our best players are in Europe, with the way borderline players such as Iheanacho played on Tuesday night.
Advocates of having a Nigerian handler for the Super Eagles during big competitions such as the World Cup always talk about using the domestic league to judge the development of the game in Nigeria. Their submissions are laced with sentiments and patriotism, which don’t add up to growth when we are pitched against the rest of the world.
Football isn’t as simple as kicking the round object around the field by 22 players for 90 minutes. Players’ skills and how they go about interpreting the instructions given to them by the coaches are sacrosanct. Where the coaches’ technical savvy is obtuse and dense, it reflects in how the boys play the game, which the greatest Edson Arantes do Nascimento once described as beautiful.
Watching the Nigerian team groomed by our coaches can be boring and frustrating. Our game isn’t exciting, not because the players lack the skills. The players are as good as the coaches. Our domestic players lack the basic rudiments of the game, such as controlling the ball and making good passes that could lead to goals. Besides, our playing pattern is laborious and lacks imagination, which make it not exciting.
The structure of the domestic league is faulty and incapable of producing the desired results, especially where the administrators think they are the best. Our domestic league administrators, including the regulators, are self-serving and myopic. They are easily hoodwinked by what is found outside the country, without looking at our peculiarities. No deliberate effort is made to train and re-train the coaches and the auxiliary staff, in a bid to improve the quality of skills impacted on the players at all levels. This is why watching the domestic league can be a nightmare.
Rather than evolve a system that would enhance the growth of the game at the grassroots, our administrators prefer to roam European countries looking for templates which create more problems for the system, when the initiators leave office. Globally, clubs are encouraged to have academies where the youngsters are taught the rudiments of the game. These rookies become the future stars of such big teams, with the exceptional ones going to bigger teams, which translates to big revenues for the teams they have left.
Unfortunately, our domestic clubs don’t think it is necessary to have youth teams. The management members have refused to see the league as a business. Rather than fashion how their teams can attract the fans to watch their matches, they are contented with taking government money.
No investor will do the business of sports where the government holds over 70 per cent of its equity. The government, which owns most of the clubs, should encourage the team’s management to outsource their revenue. Sadly, the regulators of the domestic league like to err on the side of caution instead of enforcing the rules that encourage commercialisation of clubs’ operation, with particular reference of taking them to the Nigeria Stock Exchange.
If it means having only five clubs which satisfy the rules of running as a professional outfit, let the league matches begin. With time, others will take it seriously and do what is required to qualify as a professional team. This idea of clubs owing their players and coaches wages of over nine months is cruel. Equally worrisome is the manner in which some governors whose states own the clubs behave towards them as if they are doing the players and coaches a favour by paying them as and when due.
It was quite appalling to watch how a particular governor allowed his security operatives to manhandle players, especially the girls who stormed the Government House in a peaceful protest. They were beaten groggy and made to look like criminals, not sports ambassadors of the state, which is what they are. Don’t remind me that nothing is happening to the governor. Elsewhere, the ignoble act would cost him his future in politics.
Alexis Sanchez completes move to Manchester United
Manchester United completed the signing of Alexis Sanchez from Arsenal
in a deal that sees the Armenian midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan move in
the opposite direction.
Sanchez said in his first interview : “I am thrilled to be joining the biggest club in the world. I have spent three-and-a-half wonderful years at Arsenal and I bring with me very positive memories of that great club and its fans.
“The chance to play in this historic stadium and to work with Jose Mourinho was something I could not turn down. I am very proud to be the first Chilean player ever to play for United’s first team and I hope I can show our fans all around the world why the club wanted to bring me here.”
Jose Mourinho commented: “Alexis is one of the best-attacking players in the world and he will complete our very young and talented group of attacking players. He will bring his ambition, drive and personality, qualities that make a Manchester United player and a player that makes the team stronger and the supporters proud of their club dimension and prestige.
“I would like to wish Henrikh all the success and happiness that I am sure he is going to get. He is a player that we will not forget, especially for his contribution to our Europa League victory.”
Sanchez said in his first interview : “I am thrilled to be joining the biggest club in the world. I have spent three-and-a-half wonderful years at Arsenal and I bring with me very positive memories of that great club and its fans.
“The chance to play in this historic stadium and to work with Jose Mourinho was something I could not turn down. I am very proud to be the first Chilean player ever to play for United’s first team and I hope I can show our fans all around the world why the club wanted to bring me here.”
Jose Mourinho commented: “Alexis is one of the best-attacking players in the world and he will complete our very young and talented group of attacking players. He will bring his ambition, drive and personality, qualities that make a Manchester United player and a player that makes the team stronger and the supporters proud of their club dimension and prestige.
“I would like to wish Henrikh all the success and happiness that I am sure he is going to get. He is a player that we will not forget, especially for his contribution to our Europa League victory.”
Google Celebrates Nigerian Football Legend, Stephen Keshi’s Birthday With A Doodle (photos)
Nigerian football legend, former Super Eagles captain and manager who
famously led the team to AFCON victory in 2013, Stephen Okechukwu Keshi
is being celebrated by Google today with their Doodle feature.
Keshi who passed away almost two years ago would have been 56 today
and is being celebrated by Google as one of Africa’s foremost football
legends even in death.
Stephen Keshi started his football career in 1979 and had a successful career playing for local clubs like ACB Lagos & New Nigeria Bank before moving abroad to play for clubs like Anderlecht in Belgium & RC Strasbourg in France.
He is also the only Nigerian to have won the African Cup of Nations as both Player and coach; captaining the 1994 squad to victory before leading the 2013 squad to AFCON glory as manager.
Stephen Keshi started his football career in 1979 and had a successful career playing for local clubs like ACB Lagos & New Nigeria Bank before moving abroad to play for clubs like Anderlecht in Belgium & RC Strasbourg in France.
He is also the only Nigerian to have won the African Cup of Nations as both Player and coach; captaining the 1994 squad to victory before leading the 2013 squad to AFCON glory as manager.
Monday, 22 January 2018
Walcott left Arsenal with his things in bin bags
Theo Walcott will make time for proper goodbyes with his old Arsenal colleagues after a rushed exit to Everton left him with his belongings in bin bags.
England international Walcott ended a 12-year association with the Gunners when he joined Everton in a £20million deal this week, having fallen down the pecking order at Emirates Stadium.
And the 28-year-old told a news conference on Thursday there was no great fanfare when he came to leave Arsenal’s training ground.
“When I found that I was coming here I had to go there at night just to pick up all my stuff in binbags,” he said, much to the amusement of new boss Sam Allardyce.
“That’s loyalty for you,” the well-travelled Allardyce chortled. “I’ve had a few of those – you have to sneak in and sneak out.”
Walcott went on to explain he is keen to say more prolonged farewells, while relishing Everton’s trip to north London on February 3.
“I’ve spoken to the gaffer [Arsene Wenger] and I’m sure I’ll get some time to go back and catch up with people and do my proper goodbyes. That’s the right way to do it,” he added.
“We do also play them soon as well, which I’m looking forward to.
“I’ve always had so much time for the fans and they’ve been great to me, through all our ups and downs. I can’t thank them enough. It’s part of my family, Arsenal.”
Walcott scored 19 times last season but found himself out of favour with Wenger this time around.
Nevertheless, his respect for the man who plucked him from Southampton as a teenager remains undiminished.
“I’ve always had so much respect for the manager. For whatever reason it didn’t happen this year, that’s why I’ve moved on. I just want to work hard for this team
“I’ve known him since I was 16 – to bring a young player in and have faith in him, I can’t thank him enough.”
Managers at international level have not been such a mainstay during Walcott’s up-and-down career with England, but his time in the squad during Allardyce’s fleeting time in charge left an impression.
“I had a brief spell with the manager with England I and I felt like I wanted more of that,” he explained, ahead of a prospective Everton debut at home to West Brom on Saturday
England international Walcott ended a 12-year association with the Gunners when he joined Everton in a £20million deal this week, having fallen down the pecking order at Emirates Stadium.
And the 28-year-old told a news conference on Thursday there was no great fanfare when he came to leave Arsenal’s training ground.
“When I found that I was coming here I had to go there at night just to pick up all my stuff in binbags,” he said, much to the amusement of new boss Sam Allardyce.
“That’s loyalty for you,” the well-travelled Allardyce chortled. “I’ve had a few of those – you have to sneak in and sneak out.”
Walcott went on to explain he is keen to say more prolonged farewells, while relishing Everton’s trip to north London on February 3.
“I’ve spoken to the gaffer [Arsene Wenger] and I’m sure I’ll get some time to go back and catch up with people and do my proper goodbyes. That’s the right way to do it,” he added.
“We do also play them soon as well, which I’m looking forward to.
“I’ve always had so much time for the fans and they’ve been great to me, through all our ups and downs. I can’t thank them enough. It’s part of my family, Arsenal.”
Walcott scored 19 times last season but found himself out of favour with Wenger this time around.
Nevertheless, his respect for the man who plucked him from Southampton as a teenager remains undiminished.
“I’ve always had so much respect for the manager. For whatever reason it didn’t happen this year, that’s why I’ve moved on. I just want to work hard for this team
“I’ve known him since I was 16 – to bring a young player in and have faith in him, I can’t thank him enough.”
Managers at international level have not been such a mainstay during Walcott’s up-and-down career with England, but his time in the squad during Allardyce’s fleeting time in charge left an impression.
“I had a brief spell with the manager with England I and I felt like I wanted more of that,” he explained, ahead of a prospective Everton debut at home to West Brom on Saturday
Former World-best footballer, Weah inaugurated (PICS)
The former World-best footballer and currently the President-elect of the Federal Republic of Liberia, George Weah, will be sworn into office on Monday in Samuel Kanyon Doe Stadium, Monrovia.
The retired professional footballer who was a three-time African footballer of the year replaces Africa’s first elected female president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who is stepping down after two terms. It is the first democratic transfer of power in the West African state in more than 70 years.
African Heads of states and former presidents, including Nigerian ex-president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and other political personnel, Rochas Okorocha, the Imo State governor, Senate President Bukola Saraki graced the momentous event.
Fans of the 51-year-old international footballer are in high spirits. Photos and videos of citizens jubilating in colourful costumes to witness the historic inauguration is trending on social media platforms.
Senate president of Nigeria, Bukola Saraki at the inauguration of George Weah as Liberian president.
The retired professional footballer who was a three-time African footballer of the year replaces Africa’s first elected female president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who is stepping down after two terms. It is the first democratic transfer of power in the West African state in more than 70 years.
African Heads of states and former presidents, including Nigerian ex-president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and other political personnel, Rochas Okorocha, the Imo State governor, Senate President Bukola Saraki graced the momentous event.
Fans of the 51-year-old international footballer are in high spirits. Photos and videos of citizens jubilating in colourful costumes to witness the historic inauguration is trending on social media platforms.
Pastor Ibiyeomie and Kemi Olunloyo Drama Takes New Twist... see details
Founder and Senior Pastor of Salvation Ministries, Port Harcourt, David Ibiyeomie has finally dropped charges against Kemi Olunloyo.
Controversial journalist, Kemi Olunloyo is finally free after the founder and Senior Pastor of Salvation Ministries, Port Harcourt, David Ibiyeomie dropped all charges of defamation against her.
Kemi, who is the daughter of a former governor of Oyo State took to her social media to break the news. She wrote, “My charges of #criminaldefamation has been dropped by Nigerian police and plaintiff Pastor David Ibiyeomie. I am now FREE!!
“Thank you to my loyal fans, my lawyers Kayode Ajulo and Eugene Meabe of Castle Law firm, Justice Oshomah at Federal High Court and Justice Fubara in magistrate court. PRAISE GOD!!
“I will apply to pick up my travel passport that was seized by the Federal Government as part of my bail conditions. God is good!! ”
It would be recalled that Pastor Ibiyeomie had dragged Kemi to court for allegedly defaming him. He had her arrested and thrown into prison for months.
However, Kemi a few days ago, testified that she had given her life to Christ and had become a member of Pastor’s Ibiyeomie’s church.
Controversial journalist, Kemi Olunloyo is finally free after the founder and Senior Pastor of Salvation Ministries, Port Harcourt, David Ibiyeomie dropped all charges of defamation against her.
Kemi, who is the daughter of a former governor of Oyo State took to her social media to break the news. She wrote, “My charges of #criminaldefamation has been dropped by Nigerian police and plaintiff Pastor David Ibiyeomie. I am now FREE!!
“Thank you to my loyal fans, my lawyers Kayode Ajulo and Eugene Meabe of Castle Law firm, Justice Oshomah at Federal High Court and Justice Fubara in magistrate court. PRAISE GOD!!
“I will apply to pick up my travel passport that was seized by the Federal Government as part of my bail conditions. God is good!! ”
It would be recalled that Pastor Ibiyeomie had dragged Kemi to court for allegedly defaming him. He had her arrested and thrown into prison for months.
However, Kemi a few days ago, testified that she had given her life to Christ and had become a member of Pastor’s Ibiyeomie’s church.
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