Friday, 13 March 2015

Woman With Giant 48NN Breasts Is Looking For Love

"It’s time for the breasts to find a man."

Kristy manages to carry around her 2.3 stone breasts every day, and now she is looking for someone to share them with.

A woman with humongous breasts is looking for love, as she pleads: "It’s time for them to find a man."

Kristy Love's breasts weigh a whopping 15.8lbs each, equaling the weight of a small child.

Initially she felt embarrassed by them, and they even get in the way while she cooks.
 
Kristy Love's breasts weigh a whopping 15.8lbs each
"Sometimes they get in the pot, sometimes they get in the pan," she said. "Sometimes they get caught on the burner."
"My boobies do not need to be alone"
But now she feels it is time to celebrate them.
She said: "My boobies do not need to be alone. It’s time for them to find a man."
Kristy earns more than a thousand dollars a day rubbing and smothering clients with her massive boobs

While they used to be a hindrance, with the 36-year-old feeling that they were so big they had prevented her from getting a job, she now uses them to help her out in every day life.
Kristy Love feels it is time to celebrate them

She added: "I carry everything in there; perfume, cell phone, car keys, driving license."
The love seeker, from Atlanta, Georgia, works as a masseuse and earns more than a thousand dollars a day rubbing and smothering clients with her massive boobs.
Love feels they were so big they had prevented her from getting a job


©Mirror UK

Thursday, 12 March 2015

Nigeria Hires Foreign Mercenaries To Take On Boko Haram

The presence of mercenaries from South Africa and the former Soviet Union adds to the broad array of forces lining up against Boko Haram

Nigeria has brought in hundreds of mercenaries from South Africa and the former Soviet Union to give its offensive against Boko Haram a shot in the arm before a March 28 election, according to regional security, defence and diplomatic sources.

Rumours about the use of foreign "soldiers of fortune" against the Islamist militant group gained substance this month when pictures surfaced on Twitter showing armoured vehicles rumbling along a street in what was said to be Maiduguri, the regional capital of Nigeria's Boko Haram-hit northeast.
In one photo that appeared on Twitter on March 6, a white man in a khaki tee-shirt and body armour is shown beside a heavy-calibre machine gun on top of one of the sand-coloured vehicles as the column drives through the streets at dusk.

A Reuters reporter with knowledge of Maiduguri was able to verify the location of the photo as the Bama road, leading southeast out of the city, near the University of Maiduguri.
Election campaign posters of Borno state governor Kashim Shettima hanging from street lights indicate it was taken recently. The lights, notable for their ornate ironwork, were only installed last year.
 
Foreign Mercenaries were involved in the deployment, which comes after the six-week postponement of elections in mid-February due to the threat from Boko Haram
In confirming the presence of hundreds of foreign military contractors on the ground, including recently in the city of Maiduguri, security and diplomatic sources put the total much higher than the hundred or so previously reported.
Nigerian government spokesman Mike Omeri declined to comment, referring questions to military spokesman Chris Olukolade, who also declined to respond to multiple requests for comment.

In an interview with Voice of America late on Wednesday, President Goodluck Jonathan said two companies were providing "trainers and technicians" to help Nigerian forces. He did not name the firms, or the nationalities, or give numbers.
But a West African security source and a South African defence source said the foreign troops were linked to the bosses of former South African private military firm Executive Outcomes.
 
Several hundred foreigners were involved in running major offensive operations against Boko Haram
Executive Outcomes was best-known for its involvement in Angola's 1975-2002 civil war and against Revolutionary United Front rebels in an internal conflict in Sierra Leone in 1995. It disbanded in 1998, under pressure from the post-apartheid government in Pretoria to curtail mercenary activities.

The West African security source said several hundred foreigners were involved in running major offensive operations against Boko Haram, and were being paid around $400 a day in cash.
Their impact on the fighting so far could not be quantified, but the general run of the campaign has seen the tide turn somewhat against Boko Haram in recent weeks.



©Reuters

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

“BALI NINE” : Nigeria Pleads For Mercy

The three Nigerians on death row in Indonesia; L-R, Raheem Agbaje Salami, Silvester Obiekwe and Okwudili Ayotanze

The Nigerian government on Monday urged Indonesia to spare the lives of three of its citizens facing execution after being convicted of drug trafficking there.
The three Nigerians are on death row in a country with some of the toughest drug laws in the world, having lost their appeals in Indonesian courts against their convictions.
A senior official in the Nigerian foreign ministry, Danjuma Sheni, conveyed the country's plea for clemency to the Indonesian ambassador to Nigeria, Harry Purwanto.
 
President Goodluck Jonathan (L) receving letter of Credence from Indonesia Ambassador, H.E. Harry Purwanto at the State House Abuja on Tuesday, 3rd March 2015
"We... are very aware of the consequences of drug trafficking in your country, but we still want to put it on record and we still want to appeal to you and to your president to temper justice with mercy," Sheni told the envoy during a meeting.
Sheni said Nigeria was aware that the three convicted nationals had gone through Jakarta's judicial process "and their appeals to the president have been turned down."
From left, Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan, Frenchman Serge Atlaoui and Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte. Bottom row from left. Nigerian Raheem Agbaje Salami, Filipina Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, and Nigerian Silvester Obiekwe Nwolise

He added that one of the three, Raheem Agbaje Salami, had been moved to an island and could be executed at "any moment".
"We want to appeal to you and through you to your government that this death sentence that may be carried out on Salami any moment from now should be converted to life imprisonment," said Sheni, the ministry's permanent secretary.
The Indonesian ambassador promised to pass Abuja's plea for mercy on to Jakarta for consideration.
Drug convicts from Australia, France, Brazil, the Philippines and Ghana are also currently facing execution in Indonesia despite repeated appeals for mercy from foreign governments.
A ferry transports visitors to Nusakambangan prison island (in background), located in central Java, Indonesia, on February 26, 2015, home to the high-security prison

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, officially still has the death penalty but it is rarely implemented.
The last known executions took place in June 2013 when southern Edo state ignored pleas by Amnesty International and other rights groups and executed by hanging four prisoners convicted of armed robbery or murder.
They were the first such executions in the country in seven years.
Nigeria has for many years been a transit point for the drug trade into and out of West Africa.

More than 8,000 suspected drug traffickers, including women, were arrested across in the country last year, a spokesman of the nation's anti-drug agency, Mitchell Ofoyeju, told AFP.

Monday, 9 March 2015

Bali 9: Faces Of The Condemned Africans

Nine people are currently on death row, awaiting execution by firing squad in Indonesia. Seven of those convicted criminal are (top row from left) Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan, Frenchman Serge Atlaoui and Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte (Bottom row from left) Nigerian Raheem Agbaje Salami, Filipina Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, and Nigerian Silvester Obiekwe Nwolise


As Bali Nine ringleaders make their final legal bid to escape execution, meet the other Nigerian and Ghanaian inmates due to join then in front of the firing squad

RAHEEM AGBAJE SALAMI

In 1999 Nigerian Jaimu Owolabi Abashin was sentenced to life in prison, a year after he was caught smuggling 5.3 kilograms of heroin through Indonesia's Juanda airport.
In May 2006 his sentence was upgraded to the death sentence and he was not given an opportunity to appeal.
When first arrested, he purported to be a Spaniard named Raheem Agbaje Salami with the use of a fake passport.

17 years after his arrest, Indonesian authorities continue to use the man's false identity. It has been reported that the Nigerian joked about the mix-up wit h Australians Chan and Sukumaran through their cell walls on Nusakambangan.
Like Chan and Sukumaran, lawyers for Nigerian death row inmate Raheem Agbaje Salami failed to have a challenge against his clemency rejection heard in the administrative court on Monday.
Nigerian death row prisoner Raheem Agbaje Salami has already made friends with Chan and Sukumaran


 SILVESTER OBIEKWE

Silvester Obiekwe is another Nigerian on death row. He was first arrested in 2003 for smuggling 1.2 kilograms of heroin into Indonesia. 
He was found with 66 capsules in his stomach. He is a 'priority' for execution as he has been caught operating drug syndicates whilst on death row.
 
Silvester Obiekwe is another Nigerian on death row. He is a 'priority' for execution as he has been caught operating drug syndicates whilst on death row
OKWUDILI AYOTANZE

Another Nigerian man, Okwudili Ayotanze, could also face the firing squad with Chan and Sukumaran.  
He was caught trying to smuggle 1.15 kilograms of heroin from Pakistan into Jakarta. However, he has now become a gospel singer, performing with prison guards and has released an album from behind bars.
Okwudili Ayotanze (2nd left) is a charismatic gospel singer who has released albums with titles such as "Never be afraid"


MARTIN ANDERSON

Martin Anderson is a man from Ghana and was sentenced to death in June 2004 after he was convicted for possessing 50 grams of heroin in Jakarta in 2003.
It is understood that in 11 years a Ghanaian official has never visited him. 

Nigerian citizen Silvester Obiekwe to be executed along with Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran known as the ringleaders of the Bali Nine group in Indonesia