Wreckage’ of missing AirAsia jet is spotted in sea

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Reports reaching us is saying AirAsia flight that went missing
early yesterday morning may be at the bottom of the sea.

Indonesian officials have set a search party for the missing plane, hunting for the missing plane . They have spotted objects in the sea believed to be wreckage from
the plane which was carrying 155 passengers and 7 crew members.

Just this morning an Australian Orion aircraft detected suspicious objects near Nangka island, about 160 kilometres south-west of Pangkalan Bun, near central Kalimantan, which is about 1,120 kilometres from the location where the plane lost contact while an Indonesian helicopter saw two oily spots in the search area a few hours later, this is according to Indonesian officials.

Experts are suggesting that the aircraft was likely flying too slow to avoid a thunderstorm they encountered and this caused the plane to stall
and crash.

An interview with a Nigerian gay activist, speaking on how he was almost killed being a gay

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As the struggle for gay freedom in Africa is fought Bisi is one of the foremost gay activist fighting for the gay community in Africa he had an interview with NPR.com , 29 year old Nigerian Gay rights activist, Bisi Alimi, who was the first person to come out as gay on Nigerian TV, he talked about the challenges of living as a gay
Nigerian man, living with the HIV virus, his relationship with his immediate family members
and also about the Nigerian anti-gay law.

Checkout the expository interview below…

Alimi’s acting career was just starting to take off when his sexuality stole the spotlight. The
student newspaper at University of Lagos, where he was studying theater, threatened to publish a
photo of him with his then boyfriend. So Alimi beat them to the punch. He went on “New Dawn
with Funmi,” one of the most popular talk shows in Nigeria, and challenged a long-held belief that
homosexuality was brought to Africa by white colonizers. That was also the year Alimi was
diagnosed with HIV. Suddenly, his home country no longer saw him as a rising star. Alimi lost his roles on TV and on stage, many of his friends shunned him and the police even arrested him on unexplained charges.

In 2007, things got worse. He was detained at the airport on his way back from the United Kingdom, where he gave an interview to BBC
Network Africa, and was released two days later. Then a group of men entered his home and attempted to kill him. Alimi fled to the U.K. and hasn’t been back to Nigeria since.

Why are you happy about Nigeria’s harsh anti-gay law?

I see the law as a catalyst for change for good in Nigeria. You don’t understand what it is like to
fight a beast that you cannot see. Before the signing of that law, between 95 and 98 percent of Nigerians were in support of it. The latest poll says 88 percent of Nigerians now support the law. That’s a 10 percent drop. Some people who are not LGBT are now saying, “Did we just support a law that criminalizes people … for falling in love?” [When] you see that your uncle or cousin is gay, it kind of changes the conversation.

Speaking of family, how does your family feel about your identity?

I’m in a relationship that I can’t talk to my parents about — it’s like a big elephant in the room. But [the fact that] they want to accept me [as gay] is a form of support.
I was diagnosed [with HIV] in 2004, and I’ve never discussed it with my parents. This is my personal life, and I don’t want them to get
involved with it. Many times when I struggle with the challenges of being gay and being [HIV] positive, even living in diaspora and so many other things, I just really want to have somebody I can cry to who has blood lineage but I just said no.

So who is in your support network?

Mostly close friends. Many times it’s people I don’t know. I remember one incident when I was
at my university. I was going back to my room at night and I was stopped by two guys. They were
making very derogatory statements and becoming really aggressive. There was a [student] coming. So I raised my voice: “What did I do to you, why are you guys so frustrated with me?” ]The student] stopped and said, “What’s
going on?” I told her these guys were attacking me, and they said, “Oh he’s gay, he’s a faggot.” She just looked at them and said, “What if he’s a faggot? What’s your problem?” She stood up to them. These are the unsung heroes of my existence because anything could have happened that night.

Back in 2007, a group of guys tried to kill you and that’s when you fled the country. But did you ever want to leave Nigeria before then?

I was lucky enough to go through a 2-hour ordeal of being beaten and almost being shot in the head and escaping. If those guys are still alive, they might have read one or two of my interviews. I wonder how they feel that they
almost killed me. But I felt that leaving was never a choice until my mother said, “Do you still have reason [to stay]? I think you should leave.”

How did you react when when you were diagnosed with HIV?

By 2001 I started working in HIV prevention because I lost my best friend [to the disease]. So I was kind of aware. That was why my diagnosis was a shock to me. I broke down and started crying and thought like this is the end of my life because I have seen my friends die. It’s such a big thing that even within the gay community, if you’re positive, that’s the end of it. Nobody wants to talk to you or date you, but you become the story everyone wants to talk about. So I didn’t tell anybody. I carried it for three years before leaving Nigeria. I didn’t start medication until 2009.

If you had known about the treatments and support for HIV then, would you have reacted
differently?

No, because then I might still be in Nigeria. And I still wouldn’t want to talk about it because it would still be a death sentence. Treatment is a big challenge and people [in Nigeria] still don’t have access to it. And the support system is still
not there because of the stigma against gay men — it’s a belief that [HIV] is a punishment from God. So it’s very difficult to exist with that system.

How would you assess the progress across Africa in providing HIV treatment?

We are still betraying generations when it comes to HIV prevention and treatment. Many people still need access to this treatment and we still have children being born with the virus when we know we can prevent it. We’re lacking political willpower and funding to HIV projects. It has become a political game.

Being an advocate gives you a different kind of stage than acting does. If you had a choice, would you go back in to acting?

I think I studied theater because I was pretty much a drama queen [laughs]. Acting is my biggest passion. The unfortunate thing is that it’s something I would never touch again because it left a big scar in my life. Even when I did try to go back to acting, I kept thinking, “If you keep doing this, you’re going to bring up media interest again.” I have media interest now but it’s very humane. It’s not about who I kissed last night or who I’m hanging out with.

So you’re done with theater?

If there’s anything I want to go back to, it’s acting. I want to be back on stage dancing and acting, but I’m also very scared of it.

The summary of it all is that homosexuality is yet to be accepted in Africa most especially Nigeria, you are seen as a weirdo when you are gay in Nigeria .

AirAsia flight carrying 162 fromIndonesia to Singapore ismissing

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It is not up to a year when a flight got missing in Asia,  it appears another one is missing again. An AirAsia flight carrying 162 people – 155 passengers, two pilots, four flight attendants and one engineer, which took off from the city of
Surabaya in Indonesia and bound for Singapore, lost contact with air traffic control about two hours after take-off, while flying over the Java Sea.

It was reported that138 adults, 16 children and one infant was in the missing flight. According to a statement released by AirAsia following the disappearance of the
plane.

Indonesia’s acting director general of transportation, said the last contact between pilot and the air traffic control was at 6.13 a.m.
on Saturday) “when the pilot requested permission to deviate from its submitted flight plan route due to weather condition.”

There was vigorous thunderstorm at the time. It’s been hours now since the plane went missing and there has been no update on the
plane’s whereabouts.

AirAsia has since released a statement about the people on board. They said the people on board included 156 Indonesians, three South Koreans, one French person, one Malaysian and one
Singaporean. But Britain has said one of their citizens was on board too .

Search and Rescue is underway for Flight QZ8501, hoping that something positive comes of the search.

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Bobby Shmurda SpentChristmas In Jail, Rapper IsStill On Rikers Island

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When Greenberg was asked on Christmas Eve where Bobby Shmurda was at that exact moment he candidly admitted that he was on Rikers Island, which is New York City’s main jail complex.

“He is on Rikers Island. I’m on my way up there as we’re speaking.”

Bobby Shmurda was arrested on Wednesday, December 17, outside of New York City’s Quad Recording Studios, which is located in Times
Square. He was one of 15 people that were arrested at the scene, which was believed to have been the result of a two-year investigation by New York Police Department’s Brooklyn South
special Narcotics Prosecutor’s Narcotics Gang Unit.

And now Shmurda’s lawyer Greenberg is talking and really blazing hot, he reportedly said

“I’ve analyzed the indictment down to the bone. It’s just talking. Bobby
shouldn’t be charged with anything. I have told your colleagues in the media, the indictment is a bunch of b*******.
The first 41 pages are just kids talking, in not even English. Bobby isn’t charged with anything except talk in the indictment.”

And he continued saying

“The government hates rap and the government hates rappers,” he declared, while he also insisted that he is “not going to let them crucify Bobby Shmurda.”

If Bobby Shmurda is found guilty of five of the eight charges brought against him, he could spend between eight and 25 years in
prison

Source : Inquisitr

Eminem says he’s gay

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The news trending now is about Eminem being gay?

The rapper, who a lot have accused of being homophobia, comes out open for a cameo in the controversial Seth Rogen and James Franco film.

“When I say things about gay people, or people think my lyrics are homophobic – it’s because
I’m gay,” Eminem deadpans in the movie.”I like men.”

He was interviewed by Franco’s character, the Eight Mile star says, “I’m more shocked that people haven’t figured it out yet. I mean, it’s kind of like I’ve been playing gay peek-a-boo.”

Hmm well good for and good luck to his choice of sexuality.

North Korea blast US calling Obama a monkey

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This is really epic, North Korea calling President Barack Obama “a
monkey” and blamed the U.S. on Saturday for shutting down its Internet amid the hacking row
over the comedy “The Interview.”
North Korea has denied involvement in a crippling cyberattack on Sony Pictures but has expressed fury over the comedy depicting an assassination of its leader Kim Jong Un.

After Sony Pictures initially called off the release in a decision criticized by Obama, the movie has opened this week.

On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defense Commission, the country’s top governing body led by Kim, said that Obama was behind the release of “The Interview.” It described the movie as illegal, dishonest and reactionary.

“Obama always goes reckless in words and deeds like a monkey in a tropical forest,” an unidentified spokesman at the commission’s
Policy Department said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

“If the U.S. is to persistently insist that the hacking attack was made by the DPRK, the U.S. should produce evidence without fail, though belatedly,” the statement publish by KCNA said.

He also accused Washington for intermittent outages of North Korea websites this week, after
the U.S. had promised to respond to the Sony hack.

There was no immediate reaction from the White House on Saturday. According to the North Korea commission’s spokesman, “the U.S., a big country, started
disturbing the Internet operation of major media of the DPRK, not knowing shame like children playing a tag.”

The commission said the movie was the results of a hostile U.S. policy toward North Korea, and
threatened the U.S. with unspecified consequences.

North Korea and the U.S. remain technically in a state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War
ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

The rivals also are locked in an international standoff over the North’s nuclear and missile programs and its alleged human rights abuses. The U.S. stations about 28,500 troops in South Korea as deterrence against North Korean aggression.

Source: Associated Press

Kim is upset she can’t a second baby

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Right now Kim Kardashian is not a very happy woman in fact she is sad… Lately she and her husband has been trying hard to get pregnant.

Kim has been very open with
friends and family about this issue … It was reported that she and Kanye have been trying to have another baby for the last 9 months but nothing has worked.

Kim has been to different fertility doctors, but they’ve made it clear how difficult it will be to have another baby .

Turns out North West was a miracle baby … she had 3 specialists tell her she couldn’t get pregnant before North was conceived.

The pic was taken Tuesday
in Bev Hills after vispiting her doctor. We’re told Kanye has been to almost every doctor’s visit …
Kim goes once a month.

Well wishing them all the very best

Chris Brown & KarruecheTran spotted leaving a club

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Looks like these love birds Chris and Karrueche can’t get over each other, they keep going back and forth in their relationship like a ping-pong . The on/off again couple were spotted leaving a night club together on Wednesday Dec. 24th.

TMZ caught this time,  they got a photo, Karrueche hosted a holiday party at the club and Chris showed up to support his girl.