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Sunday, 23 March 2014

Lady Gaga defends puke performance

Lady Gaga has no regrets about hiring a woman to vomit on her.

The 27-year-old star caused controversy when she brought so-called vomit painter Millie Brown on stage during her performance at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas last week to throw up a green liquid all over her, but she maintains it was ''art in the purest form".

She told the Today show on Friday: ''I guess we weren't completely surprised [by the controversy].

''Millie and I know that not everybody's going to love that performance, but we both really believe in artistic expression and strong identities. And I support her and what she does.''

The unusual performance was slammed by former bulimia sufferer Demi Lovato on Twitter, who accused her of glamorising eating disorders.

She tweeted: ''Bottom line, it's not 'cool' or 'artsy' at all. Putting the word ART in it isn't a free card to do whatever you want without consequences.''

But Lady Gaga argued: '''ARTPOP', my new album, is about bringing art and music together in the spirit of creative rebellion. And for [me and Millie], that performance was art in its purest form. But we totally understand that people won't be into it.''

She added: ''Did we want the controversy? I suppose it doesn't matter either way. We don't make things for any intention in particular, other than in the spirit of entertaining the crowd and creating something that was really for the moment.

''We sometimes think that there's a perception that what I'm doing is all a big show. And I really truly feel that it's just part of who I am.

"Every moment of my life is devoted to my music and to my fans, and it's really truly me.''

Estranged wife of Mercy Johnson’s husband speaks from Canada



mercy johnson
Lovely Okojie, former wife of Odianosen Okojie (Mercy Johnson’s husband) said she has moved on after the debacle that saw the father of her two children move on with very popular actress, Mercy Johnson.  
Lovely who is in her early 30s maintained the episode which made her husband go for another woman is now history.  She had maintained a deafening silence for long until Saturday, March 15, 2014, when she spoke with Encomium from her base in Canada. 
Lovely Okojie and her children

“I have no explanation to anybody.  Life is full of ups and downs. I have accepted my fate.”
How are the children doing now? We probed her further.
“The children are doing fine.  I thank God for them.”
We also threw another question at her on how she has been able to cope with the children’s welfare. She replied thus, “Like I said, I thank God. I am coping well.”

Our conversation was, however, disrupted when we asked her if her former husband (Odianosen Okojie) has been assisting in the children’s upkeep.  She was furious, insisting the man in question is  history.

1
“What do you mean?  That is my past.  Don’t ask me questions about my past.  I don’t want to relate with my past.  In fact, I don’t know what you are talking about,” and the phone went off.
A source close to her revealed to ENCOMIUM Weekly that she (Lovely) is still very much bitter about what happened to her marriage to Prince Okojie.
“She is still bitter.  She felt betrayed.  She is not thinking of another marriage now, she is yet to recover from the past experience.”
Lovely came to public consciousness when she raised the alarm in 2011 that the man actress Mercy Johnson was planning to marry was actually her legal husband.  At this time, preparations towards the wedding was going on with the super star actress shopping for her wedding in Europe.  And when everything seemed to be going smoothly, Lovely dropped the bombshell with pictures of her marriage to Okojie to back up her claim.
There was a slight setback and when many had thought the setback would truncate the marriage plans, the lovebirds, Odia Okojie and Mercy Johnson presented a united front.
They were married at the Christ Embassy Church, Oregun, Lagos on Saturday, August 27, 2011, amidst tight security.  The couple have been blessed with a child (Purity) while they are expecting another one, according to reports in some section of the media.

Chris Brown says he feels like ‘a caged animal’ in jail



BAD boy R&B artist Chris Brown doesn’t seem to like prison too much, speaking on the phone about his brief time behind bars.

TMZ is reporting that Brown has said he feels like a “caged animal” and that his time in jail has been “the worst experience in my life”.

Spending his time behind bars working out and writing music, he has said he will “never f*** up again”.

Fortunately for Brown, he has enough cash to get himself out of jail pretty soon, with the R&B star negotiating to pay off his assault victim to make the case go away.

Brown got sentenced to a month in jail last week after being arrested when he got kicked out of rehab for breaking three internal rules. One of these being “stay at least two feet away from every woman,” a rule that was broken after he was seen touching a woman’s elbow and hand.

Brown was meant to be staying in rehab while the judge decided whether or not he broke his probation from the famous Rihanna case.

Once the judge got word that he had been kicked out, Brown was immediately arrested.

Dangote draws Nigeria, France into 'cement war' in Senegal

Its shimmering azure chimney stacks towering into the sky, the latest cement works launched by Africa's richest man lies idle in a Senegalese meadow - stopped in its tracks by legal action and cut-throat competition in a rapidly growing industry.
Nigerian industrialist Aliko Dangote's cement business has been flourishing elsewhere in Africa and the Senegalese project, first conceived four years ago, was due to start production in June.
But the west African nation's government is being taken to a regional arbitration court in Ivory Coast by French manufacturer Vicat, which claims that the plant represents a "distortion of competition" in a country where the market is already saturated.
"This is the first time in the history of Senegal that we have seen a plant built in violation of all the rules," said Boubacar Camara, president of Sococim, a Senegalese subsidiary of Vicat.
Dangote, 56, made his first fortune in Nigeria more than three decades ago when he started trading commodities with a loan from his uncle.
His cement business is the jewel in the crown of the Dangote Group, the largest industrial conglomerate in west Africa according to Forbes magazine, which describes Dangote variously as "the richest black person in the world" or "Africa's richest man", with a personal fortune of $25 billion.
He has been expanding his empire outside of Nigeria in recent years - Dangote Cement now has operations in 15 African countries - but the Senegal project and the court case aiming to stop it may come to represent a frustrating inability to leverage his influence across the entire continent.
4,000 jobs 
"A cement plant is dangerous, you need permits, prior authorisation and you also have to conduct an environmental impact study. That hasn't been done," Camara told AFP.
The water-cooling technology involved in the $630 million plant would require a daily withdrawal of 4,500 cubic metres of groundwater, a precious commodity in an arid Sahelian country like Senegal, according to Camara.
"It's a race against the clock. Once production begins, it will be much more difficult to intervene," Camara told AFP.
"Given the conditions in which he has installed his plant, Dangote could come and set whatever prices he likes."
Dangote has said the operation would create 4,000 jobs and, in any case, the state has no power to oppose it, a source close to the Senegalese Ministry of Mines told AFP.
"Initially, there was were certain procedural irregularities that Dangote fixed," said the source, adding that "the main problem was the environmental impact".
French President Francois Holland wrote to his Senegalese counterpart Macky Sall in January about the plant "in order to raise awareness of the difficulties faced by Sococim", according to a source in the Senegalese presidency.
Sall responded to the effect that "the rule of law and the Senegalese courts" would must be allowed to decide whether the project could go ahead, the source told AFP.
Welcomed with open arms 
It is not the first time that the controversial project has run into problems.
Senegalese courts ruled during construction that it encroached on a sacred forest owned by the descendents of Cheikh Amadou Bamba, a Sufi Muslim mystic and religious leader who was revered by millions of Senegalese.
Construction was only allowed to recommence when Dangote offered the family a persuasive $12.6 million in compensation.
Villagers in Galene, the tiny settlement on the doorstep of the cement works 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Dakar, say it has been installed on land once used by thousands of farmers and their animals.
"We fear that it is going to stop us growing and raising our animals," said Oumy Ba, the village chief.
Community leader Bougouma Thiongane said however that the project had been "welcomed with open arms".
Galane and the surrounding villages have no electricity or tap water and Dangote promised to change that, while also raising employment prospects for every young person in the area, Thiongane said.
The plant, one of the largest in Africa, will be ready to begin operating "within 90 days", Aramine Mbacke, the CEO of Dangote Senegal, told Financial Afrik magazine earlier this month.
It will produce three million tonnes of cement annually, three-fifths of which will go onto the local market, he said.
The operation is being launched amid increased competition between Sococim, which has a 65 percent market share, and Ciments du Sahel, which makes up the rest.
"Both plants already have a combined capacity of six million tonnes for a market of two million tonnes. They produce below capacity. That explains the reason for this war," an official from the Ministry of Mines said.
"In the sub-region, everyone wants to make cement," he added.
The management of Dangote Senegal declined to comment.