Treasonable Sex!
You slept with my wife
Gbenga accuses dad ex-President Obasanjo and father-in-law
•Doubts paternity of kids •Seeks DNA tests
By Jibola Ojekunle
Sunday, January 13, 2008
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Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo
Photo: Sun News Publishing
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First son of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Gbenga,
has sensationally accused him and his father-in-law, Otunba
Alex Onabanjo, of sleeping with his wife, Mojisola.
Gbenga, presently asking Lagos High Court to dissolve the
seven-year-old marriage, doubts the paternity of the fruits
of the wedlock.
The shocking revelation is contained in a fresh affidavit
deposited to by the petitioner in response to cross petition
of the defendant, a copy of which was made available to Sunday
Sun at the weekend.
Earlier, Mojisola had accused Gbenga of sundry sins including
assault and battery.
The divorce suit has been dragging in court since 2006.
The 50-paragraph affidavit is averred to on Gbenga’s
behalf by his solicitors, Addeh Associates.
The tenth paragraph says: “The Petitioner (Gbenga Obasanjo)
further avers that he knows for a fact that the Respondent
committed adultery with and had an intimate, sexual relationship
with his own father, General Olusegun Obasanjo, due to her
greed to curry favours and contracts from him in his capacity
as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“The Petitioner avers that the Respondent also got rewarded
for her adulterous acts with several oil contracts with the
NNPC from his father, General Olusegun Obasanjo, amongst which
was the NNPC consultancy training in supply chain management
and project management awarded to her company Bowen and Brown.”
The eighth paragraph says: “The Petitioner avers that
the respondent confided in him severally while they living
together (sic) that she had been sexually abused and defiled
by her father, Otunba Alex Onabanjo on several occasions.”\
Neiher Chief Obasanjo nor Otunba Onabanjo could be reached
for reaction as at press time last night.
Below is the full text of the affidavit:
1. Same as hereinafter admitted, the Petitioner denies each
and every allegation of fact contained in the consequential
amendment of answer and cross-petition as if such allegations
were set out seriatim and specifically traversed.
2. The Petitioner admits paragraph 2 of the consequential
amendment of answer and paragraphs 12, 14, 15(a), 16(di),
16(diii), 17(a) and 21(a) of the cross petition.
3. The Petitioner denies paragraph 4, 5,6,7,8,9,10 of the
consequential amendment of answer and paragraphs 13, 15 (b),
16 (a), (b), (c), (d), d (ii), d(iv), e, f, g, 17(b), (c),
18, 19, 20, 21(b), 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 of the Cross Petition.
4. In response to paragraph 4 of the consequential amendment
of answer, the Petitioner denies that he has since January
2006, stopped being responsible for the payment of school
fees, books and other relevant materials and other needs of
the two children as well as general expenses for their welfare
and upkeep and avers that the Respondent normally collects
from him on behalf of the children, monies to meet all the
children needs but has refused to collect same this year despite
several reminders and entreaties from the Petitioner and the
Petitioner’s Solicitor.
5. In furtherance of paragraph (4) above, the Petitioner
avers that the children of the marriage reside and are in
the custody at alternative times with both the Petitioner
and the Respondent depending on whether they are in school
or on holidays, and are also accessible to either party whilst
in the custody of the other upon proper notification to either
side. The Petitioner denies that either party has exclusive
custody of the two children of the marriage.
6. The Petitioner denies paragraph 6 of the consequential
amendment of answer that the Respondent attends to the moral,
religious and physical well being of the two children and
states that the Respondent’s way of life and social
conduct is so unbecoming that it would have a very negative
moral and religious impact on the children if they are made
to reside with her.
7. The Petitioner avers that he has always met all the needs
of the children of the marriage despite always having serious
doubts about their actual paternity.
8. The Petitioner avers that the respondent confided in him
severally while they living together (sic) that she had been
sexually abused and defiled by her father, Otunba Alex Onabanjo
on several occasions.
9. The Petitioner avers that it was his bid to forcefully
put an end to this ignoble acts on the part of his Father-in-Law,
Otunba Alex Onabanjo, that led to the total breakdown of relations
between himself and Otunba Onabanjo.
10. The Petitioner further avers that he knows for a fact
that the Respondent committed adultery with and had an intimate,
sexual relationship with his own father, General Olusegun
Obasanjo, amongst which was the NNPC consultancy training
in supply chain management and project management awarded
to her company Bowen and Brown.
11. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent also got rewarded
for her adulterous acts with several oil contracts with the
NNPC from his father, General Olusegun Obasanjo, amongst which
was the NNPC consultancy training in supply chain management
and project management awarded to her company Bowen and Brown.
12. The Petitioner avers that the lurid sexual relationship
of the Respondent, with her own father, Otunba Alex Onabanjo
and his father General Olusegun Obasanjo, has brought him
great pain and psychological trauma and is the primary reason
for the breakdown of his marriage to the Respondent.
13. The Petitioner avers that the respondent while married
to him was also committing adultery with one Mr. Olumide Ogunlesi.
14. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent shamelessly
carried on her sexual escapades without any thought as to
the psychological effect of same on him.
15. The Petitioner avers that it is now necessary for a court
ordered DNA test to be carried out on both himself, Otunba
Alex Onabanjo and General Olusegun Obasanjo by a competent
independent medical laboratory chosen by the court, in order
to ascertain the actual paternity of the children of the marriage
as the continued uncertainty about their actual paternity
is making his life a misery.
16. The Petitioner avers that the actual father of the children
of the marriage will be found amongst himself, Otunba Alex
Onabanjo and General Olusegun Obasanjo and same must be addressed
immediately.
17. The Petitioner avers that it is pertinent that this is
done before further deliberations in this matter as the issue
of the children’s paternity is integral to the determination
of the suit and must thus be resolved and laid to rest urgently.
18. The Petitioner denies paragraph 7,8, and 9 of the consequential
amendment of answer and avers that the Respondent deserted
the Petitioner and abandoned her matrimonial home on December
2, 2004 and never came back and co-habitation between parties
ceased from that day.
19. The Petitioner specifically denies the averment in paragraph
9 of the consequential amendment of answer and puts the Respondent
to strict proof of the averment therein.
20. Further to paragraph (8) above, the Petitioner avers
that there was never violent conducts throughout the marriage
exhibited by the Petitioner towards the Respondent and the
Respondent was not in the matrimonial home until the 7th July,
2005 nor was she ever forced or compelled to leave as she
left on her own volition due to her refusal to alter her various
unbecoming conduct despite several pleas and entreaties by
the Petitioner and well-meaning family friends and relatives
on both the Petitioner and the Respondent’s side of
the family.
21 The petitioner denies the averment in paragraph 10 of
the consequential amendment of answer and requests the court
for a decree of dissolution of marriage against the Respondent
in accordance with his Petition.
22. The Petitioner denies paragraph 13(a), (b), (c), (d),
(e), (f), (g), (h), of the Cross Petition and puts the Respondent
to strict proof of the averments therein.
23. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent was consistent
in engaging in various unbecoming anti-social conduct which
brought embarrassment to the Petitioner and the children and
several pleas to the Respondent to mend her ways were met
with stiff rebuff and ultimately desertion of her matrimonial
home by the Respondent on the 2nd of December, 2004.
24. The Petitioner avers in reference to paragraphs 15(a)
and 15(b) of the Cross Petition that the children of the marriage
shall continue in school and progress to higher institutions
of learning in future, to reach their full potential as always
has been the case at the cost of the Petitioner who has always
been responsible for their upkeep and welfare.
25. The Petitioner denies paragraph 15(b) of the Cross Petition
and stats that the children reside at alternate times with
either the Respondent or the Petitioner depending on whether
their school is in session or otherwise.
26. The Petitioner denies paragraph 16(a) of the Cross Petition
and avers that it is a gold digging scheme and calculated
extortion by the Respondent of non-existent funds using the
children as a cover, as the Petitioner has always met the
entire needs of the children without prompting and is able
to continue doing same until they attain adulthood, as the
lump sum payment demanded by the Respondent clearly exposes
her ulterior motives and schemes in getting married to the
Petitioner.
27. The Petitioner denies paragraph 16(b) of the Cross Petition
and avers that apart from the fact that he already has a chauffer,
the Petitioner had purchased for the Respondent two brand
new cars during the marriage which the Respondent still holds
on to till this day. The cars are:
(i) BMW 3 Series car
(ii) Toyota Highlander Sports Utility vehicle
28. The Petitioner denies paragraph 16(c) of the Cross Petition
and avers that No. 8 Ladipo Bateye Street, GRA Ikeja belongs
to a company in which he is a director and the Petitioner
is merely a tenant paying his rent as and when due.
29. Further to paragraph (17) above, the Petitioner avers
that the request for N50 million to be used by the Respondent
to purchase a house using the children as an excuse knowing
fully well that he, the Petitioner, does not even own such
a house and does not own such funds, further exposes the gold
digging intentions of the Respondent in entering into marriage
with the Petitioner and illuminates the Respondent’s
true intention for all to see.
30 The Petitioner avers in reference to paragraph 16(d) of
the Cross Petition that he has always made and will continue
to make adequate private security arrangements for the children,
moreover as they would be in his custody.
31. The Petitioner admits paragraph 16(d) of the Cross Petition
to the effect that the Respondent has no decent home to live
in and even the Respondent’s parents home is not conducive
as the children whenever they leave his custody to the Respondent’s
custody are forced to squat with the Respondent’s parents.
32. The Petitioner denies paragraph 16(d) (iv) of the Cross
Petition and avers that No. 8 Ladipo Bateye Street, GRA Ikeja
is not “the family house” as stated by the Respondent.
33. In furtherance of (31) above, the Petitioner avers that
the Respondent made no financial contribution whatsoever to
No. 8 Ladipo Bateye Street, GRA, Ikeja and did not supervise
any construction process or make any design decisions as the
house does not even belong to him.
34. The Petitioner denies paragraph 16(e) (i) and 16(e) (ii)
of the Cross Petition and states that he has no desire to
send his children to any school outside of Nigeria for their
education and intends to have them school at Bells Secondary
School which is a high quality school run by his family, and
the University of Ibadan, his own alma mater for their tertiary
education.
35. Further to paragraph 23 above, the Petitioner avers that
the demand by the Respondent for the sums started in paragraph
15(c) of the Cross Petition is an unfortunate and sad attempt
to exhort money from him in the name of the children.
36. The Petitioner specifically denies the averment in paragraph
16(f) and 16(g) of the Cross Petition and puts the Respondent
to strict proof of same.
37. Further to paragraph 32 above, the Petitioner avers that
apart from never contributing to payment of rent at No. 8
Ladipo Bateye Street, GRA Ikeja, the Respondent never contributed
financially to anything in the home. The Petitioner further
avers that the Respondent’s morals and conducts leaves
a whole lot to be desired and the Respondent was a hindrance
and a drawback to the progress of the Petitioner rather than
them an asset or an assistance and the Petitioner would have
made much more progress in life but for the physical and psychological
trauma he was subjected to as a result of having the Respondent
as his wife.
38. The Petitioner denies paragraph 17(b) of the Cross Petition
and avers that the capability of the Respondent to earn income
is not made low due to the children needing her attention
as the children have a full complement of domestic staff,
but because the Respondent is lazy and unwilling to earn a
decent living and rather prefers to exhort money from the
Petitioner for her every need and when same is not forthcoming,
commit adultery to obtain same.
39. The Petitioner denies paragraph 17(c) and 19 of the cross
Petition and puts the Respondent to strict proof of same.
40. The Petitioner denies paragraph 18 of the Cross Petition
and avers that he has always and still is responsible for
payment of salaries of the children’s domestic staff.
41. The Petitioner denies paragraph 20(a), (b), (c), (d),
(e), (h), (i) of the Cross Petition and puts the Respondent
to strict proof of the averments therein.
42. The Petitioner admits paragraph 20(f) of the Cross Petition
only to he extent that Health Aids Support Services, an HIV/AIDS
consulting firm, belongs to him and he contributes to the
fight against HIV/AIDS scourge through the company.
43. The Petitioner admits paragraph 20 (j) of the Cross Petition
only to the extent that both companies are owned by him and
are both long moribund and do not exist or function in any
form at all.
44. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent recently executed
contracts with the Ogun State Government by obtaining a concession
of the Ogun State Liaison Office in Lagos using her company,
Royal Properties Limited, and made several millions of Naira
therefrom.
45. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent also Co-owns
a bitumen factory on Sagamu road in Ogun State with Colonel
Are, retired Director General of the State Security Service
(SSS) with massive concessions from the Ogun State Government.
46. The Petitioner avers that the Respondent owns a property
in London and one in the United State of America located at
Houston, Texas, with address as 14411 Andrea Way Lane (Sugarland).
47. The Petitioner further to paragraphs (31) and (32) above,
avers that the averments in paragraph 20(a), (b), (c), (d),
(e), (g), (h), (i), of the Cross Petition are a figment of
the Respondent’s imagination, an attempt to blackmail
him and a failed attempt to provide a platform for the justification
of the gold digging financial demands hitherto made by the
Respondent in this suit.
48. The Petitioner denies paragraph 21(b) of the Cross Petition
and avers that the Respondent has entrenched in her imagination,
a fantasy filled summation of how she expects him to earn
his income.
49. The Petitioner denies paragraph 22, 23 and 24 of the
Cross Petition and puts the Respondent to strict proof thereof.
50. The Petitioner denies paragraph 27 of the Cross Petition
in its entirety and avers that same is an elaborate gold digging
scheme carefully plotted by the Respondent ever before she
got married to him till the present day.
Signed:
Emankhu Addeh
Addeh & Associates
Legal Practitioner for the Petitioner. |