Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Get a sneak peak of her “Crazy” video

Go BTS with Seyi Shay

Get a sneak peak of her “Crazy” videoYou can now watch behind-the-scenes footage from Seyi Shay’s “Crazy” video featuring Wizkid in a new video released by JM Films. The four-minute video shows the creative technique that went into making the Meji Alabi directed flick.

Seyi Shay’s “Crazy” music video premiered on MTV Base’s Spanking New on 15 December 2014. Watch the behind-the-scenes clip below.

K helps Chris Brown to cope!

Breezy turns to Karrueche

Chris Brown has reportedly turned to his on/off girlfriend Karrueche for support. This comes after the star’s probation was revoked, which could result in jail time. Breezy, who has a March court appearance, has apparently been receiving emotional, mental and physical care from K.

A source revealed: "She's loving him. She's loving him mentally, physically and emotionally. What they have is true love and it will defeat whatever outcome happens."

The “Loyal” singer is said to be upset by what’s happening as he thought he was doing everything he could to avoid going to prison. Another source added: “This is serious business and Chris feels it…”

Wizkid not bothered by opinions

arrogance claims!

Some people have labelled Wizkid as arrogant. But guess what? He doesn’t care!

In a recent interview with Encomium magazine, Wiz was asked if he’s bothered by what people think or say about him and he said: “Never! I am not bothered. Honestly I don't hear people saying it because anytime I go out, I show my fans great love. I do my thing. I don't have problem with that because I don't love everybody as well. So I don't expect everybody to love me too. That's life."

He added that fame hasn’t changed him. “The only thing fame has changed in Wizkid is that I added some accessories. I have got nice chains, watches, and nice clothes… I am still Wizkid. I no tall, still same height."





Two murders a day, horrific kidnappings and even the police don't dare enter: Inside the ghost towns of Mexico's 'Murder Valley' - one of the deadliest places on earth Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2916766/Two-murders-day-horrific-kidnappings-police-don-t-dare-enter-Inside-ghost-towns-Mexico-s-Murder-Valley-one-deadliest-places-earth.

Two murders a day, horrific kidnappings and even the police don't dare enter: Inside the ghost towns of Mexico's 'Murder Valley' - one of the deadliest places on earth

  • 18-foot high fences separate Juarez Valley from American state of Texas
  • Vigilante forces who opposed 'Sinaloa' cartel were tortured and beheaded 
  • 'You get used to seeing dead bodies in the street,' says one local resident
  • Pictures of murdered relatives sent to families who failed to pay ransom
  • One man heard his kidnapped daughter, 17, being raped 'down the phone'
  • The police officers who were executed in 2009 have never been replaced 
  • Only 5,000 of its 60,000 original inhabitants have dared to remain
The Juarez Valley on the Mexico-Texas border, a forty mile stretch of cotton fields and ghost towns, is so dangerous that even the police don't dare to enter.
Situated to the east of Juarez City – a town which held the title of the world's most violent for three consecutive years – the criminal cartels in 'Murder Valley' run drugs, weapons and illegal immigrants across the border, murdering in cold blood anyone who interferes with their business.
Today the Juarez Valley, which runs along the Rio Grande and is just a stone's throw from the eighteen-foot fence on the US border, sees more death and violence than anywhere else in North America. It has even been suggested that it could be the deadliest place on Earth 
Scroll down for videos
Death: Gravestones line the streets of Juarez City, where kidnap and murder are a daily reality
Death: Gravestones line the streets of Juarez City, where kidnap and murder are a daily reality
Ghost town: The town of Pradexis Guadalupe is virtually devoid of life, after years of brutal gang rule
Ghost town: The town of Pradexis Guadalupe is virtually devoid of life, after years of brutal gang rule
Fear: Residents are too afraid to walk the streets, for fear they will be kidnapped and tortured
Fear: Residents are too afraid to walk the streets, for fear they will be kidnapped and tortured
Derelict: The metal shutters on many buildings remain closed all year round, and the majority of the shops have been abandoned
Derelict: The metal shutters on many buildings remain closed all year round, and the majority of the shops have been abandoned
Gang rule: This gangland graffiti means that a member of the local cartel has killed two people at this spot
Gang rule: This gangland graffiti means that a member of the local cartel has killed two people at this spot
Decay: The industry along Murder Valley used to be booming with cotton picking businesses
Decay: The industry along Murder Valley used to be booming with cotton picking businesses
'You get used to seeing dead bodies in the streets', Alejandro Montes, an employee at the only petrol station in the town of Praxedis Guadalupe, told MailOnline.
'If you're away from your home and you hear gunshots then you could end up dead', he said. 'I've lost a lot of friends who were either caught in the crossfire or worse - they had spoken out against the criminals'.
The last of Praxedis Guadalupe's police officers were executed in 2009 by the controlling Sinaloa Cartel; they have never been replaced.
The Sinaloa cartel is currently thought to be under the control of a drug lord named Zambada, who replaced 'El Chapo' Guzman following his arrest early last year.
A community vigilante force subsequently established itself in the area, but following the kidnapping, torture and beheading of its chief Manuel Castro, the residents have lived in fear of the brutal treatment reserved for community heroes.
'The narcos, rather than the police, have become the authority in The Valley,' said Alejandro. 'If you want to survive, you have to live by their rules'.
Today, Juarez Valley averages 160 murders per 100,000 residents annually according to the authorities in San Agustin, the only town in the region with any police presence at all.
The valley was once home to a 60,000-strong community. Today only around five thousand of the original residents remain. 
The rest have either fled or fallen victim to the cartel violence. Murder rates are higher in the region due to the cartels battling over territory - thugs arrive from elsewhere to kill each other in the streets

The town of Praxedis Guadalupe looks like the set of a horror film, and for many of the residents of the region the lives they lead are not far away from the image of gang violence that Hollywood presents.
Every building on the town's main street makes some form of testimony to the violence they have witnessed. The metal shutters remain closed on the buildings' windows year-round, and the majority of the shops have been abandoned.
To get access to the town's only pharmacy, you have to state your business at the armoured front door's intercom.
Throughout the town one sees burned-down houses where only the charred wooden beams still stand, bullet-ridden road signs, graffiti indicating the sites of murders, holes blasted in the sides of abandoned homes.
'In San Agustin we see on average two murders a day,' Police Supervisor Umberto Mata told MailOnline. 
Gruesome: Eight men were executed in Juarez City in 2010. It was part of the wave of violence in the city - that was eventually the subject of a police crackdown - but the killings just moved to murder valley
Gruesome: Eight men were executed in Juarez City in 2010. It was part of the wave of violence in the city - that was eventually the subject of a police crackdown - but the killings just moved to murder valley
Danger: The 40-mile long fence separating Juarez Valley from Texas has apparently made matters worse
'Murder capital': There are 160 murders per 100,000 residents annually according to the authorities in San Agustin (pictured)
'Murder capital': There are 160 murders per 100,000 residents annually according to the authorities in San Agustin (pictured)
Wanted woman: Marta Armas, the only female police officer in the region says she will be tortured and killed if she's ever caught by the drug cartels
Wanted woman: Marta Armas, the only female police officer in the region says she will be tortured and killed if she's ever caught by the drug cartels
Wanted woman: Marta Armas (pictured), the only female police officer in the region says she will be tortured and killed if she's ever caught by the drug cartels
Gun fights: Police Supervisor Umberto Mata (pictured) digs up a collection of bullets buried in the sand
Gun fights: Police Supervisor Umberto Mata (pictured) digs up a collection of bullets buried in the sand
Lawless: The gun battles in the area have raged for so long, the bullets have become rusty
Lawless: The gun battles in the area have raged for so long, the bullets have become rusty
'No man's land': San Agustin is the most westerly town in 'Murder Valley', and battle lines between government forces and narco-traffickers lie in Praxedis Guadalupe
'No man's land': San Agustin is the most westerly town in 'Murder Valley', and battle lines between government forces and narco-traffickers lie in Praxedis Guadalupe
Supervisor Mata has seen many fellow officers die during his seven years in the Juarez region. 
He added: 'The residents tend to stay indoors because of the violence. If on the rare occasion you do see someone in the street, they're probably one of the narco assassins'.
San Agustin is the most westerly town in 'Murder Valley', and battle lines between government forces and narcotraffickers lie in the No Man's Land between the next town to the east, Praxedis Guadalupe.
'We don't go past the limits of the town,' Supervisor Mata, who saw action in Juarez City during the period of greatest violence, told MailOnline. 'It's simply too dangerous.
I've busted enough of the thugs driving through our town with drugs and weapons for a price to go on my head 
Supervisor Mata 
'I'm a wanted woman three kilometres east of here,' said Marta Armas, the only female police officer on the San Agustin force. 'I've busted enough of the thugs driving through our town with drugs and weapons for a price to go on my head.
'If I step out of bounds here, it'll be torture before they kill me. That's how they deal with police officers on their side.'
The narco-traffickers who terrorise the region forbid the residents to talk to the authorities on pain of death.
'I can't talk about the terrible things they've done to me', one old woman with tears in her eyes told MailOnline. 'My husband and two sons are dead because of them. If I'm seen talking to a journalist I'll be dead within the hour.
'If I'm required to leave my office to visit another station in the valley', said Mario Fernandez, who runs the Mexican immigration checkpoint in Guadalupe, 'then I will cross into the United States and re-enter at the border I need to visit.
'If the narcos smell even the slightest hint of government forces or authority along the main road, there will be death.'
Lucky ones: Alejandro Montes (pictured) still refuses to move away from the area because his family remain
Lucky ones: Alejandro Montes (pictured) still refuses to move away from the area because his family remain
Terrified: Juan Valdez (pictured) says he sees ghosts in a local disco, where three women were killed in 2010
Terrified: Juan Valdez (pictured) says he sees ghosts in a local disco, where three women were killed in 2010
Tragedy: 'Roses Disco' (pictured), now completely abandoned - its floors covered with dog and pigeon faeces
Tragedy: 'Roses Disco' (pictured), now completely abandoned - its floors covered with dog and pigeon faeces
Apparition: Locals claim the ghost of one of the murdered girls - wearing a blood-stained dress - appears inside the disco (pictured) at night
Apparition: Locals claim the ghost of one of the murdered girls - wearing a blood-stained dress - appears inside the disco (pictured) at night
The construction of the eighteen-foot tall fence along the US-Mexico border by the American authorities seven years ago made the situation worse for many residents of Juarez Valley, they say.
Frustrated by the heightened security and greater difficulty of crossing into the United States, many of the narco-traffickers turned to kidnapping and extortion within the local community in order to continue earning.
The 17-year-old daughter of a pharmacy owner in the valley had been kidnapped on the day before MailOnline arrived in his town. He asked to remain anonymous for fear of repercussions.
This morning we had a phone call from her captors. They made us listen to her being raped down the telephone, before demanding four thousand dollars by the end of the week 
Anonymous 
'They came in the night to our house and took her from her bed,' he said, speaking with tears in his eyes of his awful experience. 'We were held at gunpoint in our own room while they took her.
'This morning we had a phone call from her captors. They made us listen to her being raped down the telephone, before demanding four thousand dollars by the end of the week.'
Many residents in the area have been the victims of kidnapping, and say that the tactics of the kidnappers are very difficult to deal with.
'If you agree to a ransom price too quickly then the kidnappers will raise it,' said one man, whose father was the victim of kidnapping from which he never returned.
His father was found decapitated three weeks after he disappeared from a restaurant where he had flashed too much money under the noses of a group of cartel members.
'They send you pictures of the person being mutilated, and tell you the more you delay the worse they will be', said his son.
Murdered: Shallow graves are dug for dead bodies, which one resident says 'you get used to seeing' in the streets
Murdered: Shallow graves are dug for dead bodies, which one resident says 'you get used to seeing' in the streets
Forgotten: Many of the buildings in Praxedis Guadalupe have been abandoned for years
Forgotten: Many of the buildings in Praxedis Guadalupe have been abandoned for years
Deadly transition: As authorities gained control of nearby Juarez City, the drug dealers and cartels moved into Juarez Valley 
Deadly transition: As authorities gained control of nearby Juarez City, the drug dealers and cartels moved into Juarez Valley 
The murder was never reported by the Juarez newspapers, nor was the crime ever solved by police investigators, who many residents claim ignore much of the horrors in the valley as they concentrate on Juarez City.
'There were eight other kidnappings in the valley that week', said his son. 'How can we expect results when the police don't even come here anymore?'
Kidnap victims in Murder Valley rarely return to their families. 'It's easier for the cartels to kill them rather than instigate any sort of revenge plan when they return', he said.
Even if I find a police officer who is honest and tell him my problem, the narcos will find out I have been talking and then kill me 
Son of kidnap and murder victim 
'I can't go to the federal police', he added. 'They have the reputation of being involved with the criminals here. Even if I find a police officer who is honest and tell him my problem, the narcos will find out I have been talking and then kill me'.
'The federal police in this town are the ones who make trouble for the locals', said the young man, who continues to live with his widowed mother. 'They have no respect for anyone and beat me up if I do anything they don't like'.
In 2008, the Sinaloa cartel (run by 'El Chapo' Guzman who last year was detained by Mexican authorities) declared war on the Juarez cartel, leading to an explosion of gang violence in Juarez City.
As El Paso's neighbour soaked up the world's attention, few noticed the savagery being committed just ten miles to the east, in a farming region carved out of the Sinaloan desert.
As the authorities began to take control of the city again in 2012, much of the business of borderland narco-trafficking moved into the Juarez Valley.
Many residents of the valley fled as a result of the violence. The sudden drop in manpower put an end to local industry, and today unemployment rates are high.
To get access to the town's only pharmacy, you have to state your business at the armoured front door's intercom.
To get access to the town's only pharmacy, you have to state your business at the armoured front door's intercom.
Wasted: Conditions in the valley's fields are perfect for cotton production, but farming produces little reward
Wasted: Conditions in the valley's fields are perfect for cotton production, but farming produces little reward
Extorted: One kilo of raw cotton sells for just ten pence, and labourers are paid less than ten per cent of the profits 
Extorted: One kilo of raw cotton sells for just ten pence, and labourers are paid less than ten per cent of the profits 
Although the valley's arid fields and intense sunlight produces perfect conditions for cotton agriculture – indeed, the valley's cotton has been said to rival that produced in Egypt – farming produces little reward.
One kilo of raw cotton sells for just ten pence, and labourers are paid less than ten per cent of the profits for a back-breaking day's work in which they may pick two hundred kilograms.
When people are desperate and haven't been able to feed their family for months, the cartels offer them money to kill people, and they take it 
Superviser Mata 
'Many people from the region, or who come here from other parts of he country, end up working as killers for the cartel', says Supervisor Mata (whose surname translates to Supervisor Kill).
'When people are desperate and haven't been able to feed their family for months, the cartels offer them money to kill people, and they take it.
'Other people arrive here from other parts of Mexico thinking that by working for the cartel they will eventually become a powerful drug lord,' he said.
'This makes it difficult because anyone here could secretly be a narco assassin. In other troubled parts of Mexico such as Michoacan, the government have records of who the gang members are.
Here we have no idea because new killers are recruited just as soon as the previous ones are killed or arrested.
Grief: Relatives comfort the daughters of Rose Esther during her wake in Praxedis Guadelupe in 2010 after she was killed when gunmen opened fire on three buses on the way back from a factory
Grief: Relatives comfort the daughters of Rose Esther during her wake in Praxedis Guadelupe in 2010 after she was killed when gunmen opened fire on three buses on the way back from a factory
'At one point last year I was talking to an eighty-year old man I had pitied for his frailty. When I asked to conduct a routine search he pulled a gun on me. It's the fact that you never know who you're dealing with makes this area so dangerous.'
'We see a lot of ghosts', said Juan Valdez, a Praxedis resident who gave his name as a famous Colombian coffee brand in order to remain anonymous, 'especially in the old disco.'
In 2010 there was a terrible shooting in the town's 'Roses Disco', during which three young girls were killed.
The building is now completely abandoned, much like the rest of the town's entertainment businesses. The floors are covered with the faeces of the pigeons and stray dogs which now inhabit the building, and the locals claim that in the evenings the ghost of one of the murder girls appears in a blood-stained dress, watching silently from the main entrance.
'I haven't moved away because my family lives here,' says Alejandro Montes who has seen many friends die as a result of the violence. 'It's possible to make a life for yourself here, it's just a different set of laws to what apply elsewhere.
'If you stay out of the narcos' way you'll survive,' he smiles. 'Just duck out of sight when you hear bullets.'

Pumping his arms, pointing his finger and firing verbal volleys: Obama's aggressive body language in State of the Union speech shows Republicans he means business

  • Obama's body language avoided impression balance of power has shifted
  • He gave his State of the Union address to Republican-controlled Congress
  • But he refrained from being conciliatory with defiant gestures and barbs
  • Contained within his speech were a host of threats to use veto powers

Pumping his arms, pointing his index finger and gesturing with his hands, President Barack Obama's body language at last night's State of the Union speech was anything but conciliatory.
Although he admitted having flaws and promised to seek Republican ideas, he deliberately avoided giving the impression that the balance of power in Washington had shifted away from the Oval Office that he will occupy for two more years.
Obama gave his hour-long, annual State of the Union address yesterday to the first fully Republican-controlled Congress of his presidency, and the mood was anything but conciliatory.
President Barack Obama points towards the crowd - the first fully Republican-controlled Congress of his presidency
President Barack Obama points towards the crowd - the first fully Republican-controlled Congress of his presidency
'I have no more campaigns to run,' he said, causing a smattering of Republican applause, followed by laughter.
That did not sit well with the competitive president, who ad-libbed immediately: 'I know 'cause I won both of 'em.

Obama won the White House in 2008 and 2012, but Republicans won a majority in both houses of Congress in 2014. The president acknowledged that with a host of veto threats in his speech.
He also spiced up his remarks with a wish that the government not 'screw things up' on the economy. The phrase did not appear in his prepared remarks.
Obama's body language and verbal barbs were not the only theatrics on display.
Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives John Boehner, who sat behind Obama, kept a serious look on his face for much of the night.
Vice President Joe Biden, who sat beside Boehner, looked giddy, blowing a kiss to his wife, Jill, who sat in the balcony with first lady Michelle Obama. 
Choreography played a key role in the speech and its long rollout. The White House began announcing the key policy proposals from the address two weeks ago, getting the 'news' out in the open before the big night.
Then some 15 minutes before Obama started speaking, the White House deliberately broke its own embargo, posting a copy of Obama's remarks online for all to see.
The President's body language revealed he was determined not to give the impression the balance of power had not shifted away from the Oval Office
The President's body language revealed he was determined not to give the impression the balance of power had not shifted away from the Oval Office
Obama's speech was littered with ad-libbed barbs directed at the Republican congress
Obama's speech was littered with ad-libbed barbs directed at the Republican congress
Members of Congress sit stony-faced as the President delivers his State of the Union speech
Members of Congress sit stony-faced as the President delivers his State of the Union speech
The White House website also featured a movie-like trailer complete with a soundtrack, hashtags and reference to Biden's infamous expletive when the president signed healthcare reform into law: 'It's a BFD.' Translation, minus the bad word: Big (freaking) deal.
Back in the chamber, lawmakers engaged in the obligatory ritual of standing and applauding when they agreed with the president's words, or sitting grim-faced when they did not.
Some waved pencils in solidarity with the victims of the recent shootings at a satirical newspaper in Paris. Alan Gross, recently freed from a Cuban jail, mouthed: 'Thank you, thank you' to Obama when the president addressed him with 'Welcome home, Alan.'
Spots of color jazzed up the chamber, mostly via female lawmakers' outfits. But Obama wore a dark suit and signature blue tie, despite an adviser's joke on Twitter suggesting that he had donned the tan number that garnered immense attention when he wore it at a White House briefing last year



Thursday, 15 January 2015

Two-Florida-high-school-football-players-charged-raping-15-year-old-girl-classroom.

Two Florida high school football players charged with 'raping 15-year-old girl in classroom


  • Two high school football players have been charged with raping a 15-year-old girl in St. Petersburg, Florida
  • The incident happened on Monday in a classroom at Dixie Hollins High School 
  • Authorities would not say if the girl attended the school, though she did say she did not know the two boys

  • Two high school students have been charged with raping a 15-year-old girl.
    The incident happened on Monday and the victim reported the crime that same day, saying it happened in a classroom at Dixie Hollins High School in St. Petersburg, Florida.
    Authorities would not reveal if the girl attends the school, though she did say she does not know the two boys.

    Two high school students have been charged with raping a 15-year-old girl at Dixie Hollins High School (above) in St. Petersburg, Florida

    BREAKING NEWS: Paris policewoman injured outside President Hollande's palace after 'driver deliberately knocked her down'

    • Two men drove wrong way up a one-way street and hit the police officer 
    • Suspects abandoned their vehicle and fled on foot but were arrested
    • President Hollande was in the Elysee Palace at the time of attack
    • Unclear whether hit and run is linked to the terror attacks in Frenchcapital.                                                                                                                                                                                      
      A policewoman has been deliberately knocked down and injured by a driver outside President Hollande's palace in central Paris.
      Witnesses have said the motorist aimed at the officer outside the Élysée Palace and two people have been arrested.
      A reporter on BFM TV in France said the car had been driving the wrong way along a one-way system before ramming the policewoman and knocking her to the floor overnight. 
      Scroll down for video 
      Hit and run: A policewoman guarding the Elysee Presidential Palace in Paris, pictured today, has been deliberately run down outside after a driver went the wrong way up a one-way street
      Hit and run: A policewoman guarding the Elysee Presidential Palace in Paris, pictured today, has been deliberately run down outside after a driver went the wrong way up a one-way street
      The men in the car then abandoned it and fled on foot but were chased by police on bikes and arrested. President Hollande was in the palace at the time.  
      Stephanie Weber-Boyer from police union Alliance said: 'The policewoman said that the driver looked at her in the eyes, this is what allows us to say that he drove into her deliberately'.
      She added: 'You can not tell if it is related to what happened last week'

      Protection: The Elysee Palace, pictured last week, is guarded by armed police day and night and President Hollande was there when the officer was attacked
                                                                                                                                          
       
      Protection: The Elysee Palace, pictured last week, is guarded by armed police day and night and President Hollande was there when the officer was attacked
      The victim's condition is unclear but it appears she suffered injuries to her arms and upper body. 
      The incident comes with France on high security alert after a week of violence in the capital in which 17 people were killed in attacks by three Islamist militants. 
      The reports said it was not clear whether the incident was connected to those attacks.
      Police officials could not be reached immediately forcomment.                                                                                                                    

    Toke Makinwa and Hubby Share The Most Romantic Messages As They Mark Their 1st Anniversary

    Toke Makinwa and Hubby Share The Most Romantic Messages As They Mark Their 1st Anniversary


    It’s been a year since celebrity couple, Toke Makinwa and Maje Ayida got married in a low key intimate ceremony after dating each other for about 12 years. Toke Makinwa and Maje took to their Instagram pages to shower love and affection on each other. When you read these message, you will see nothing but […] The post Toke Makinwa and Hubby Share The Most Romantic Messages As They Mark Their 1st Anniversary.                                   https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfG8p1j_PmU5ec5ioTCoAG9avaqG2v0tPKPuAk9rR9ZK7UmBUty-WcV-IaHj8lfXwUAw0DoNCkIUa7eLg8eTlZBGimjcWkrrjeyiKsMVXfrquFhtC8QHS33BCL-3ZqSVbupLdFEkez5vwd/s1600/0.png                                                                                   https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEiEkEO5wiX_MX7cqB0JUzz4VBiqg3ktWNeFRwKUcyAulx7s5qcsRsblyjK9VG0LMEZloiq1qbQ2UIrzf_qYV9g-uLXdbhDc1uuH1Up5F16CtSOKdSPH8-t8CbzxtO48BGCL6jxZAaE7ep/s1600/1.png

    Friday, 9 January 2015

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