Skip to main content

JSS2 student commits suicide in Benue over boyfriend wahala



Jessica Beer, a Junior Secondary School (JSS) II student of Gyegeh Memorial College Logo1, Makurdi, Benue state, has committed suicide after being jilted by her boyfriend.

The female student according sources drank substance believed to be poison and was rushed to a clinic in Akpehe, before doctors confirmed her dead on arrival .


A close friend of the deceased, who would rather want to remain anonymous, told the Nation that the girl committed suicide because her boyfriend by name Labi, a pork meat seller at Wurukum Market in Makurdi impregnated and abandoned her and then impregnated another girl.

Residents of Akpehe who were startled by the news rushed to the clinic to catch a glimpse of the remains of the girl.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to make some home products for Sale

                               TABLE OF CONTENT GERMICIDE(IZAL) LIQUID SOAP SHAMPOO TOILET SOAP HAIR CREAM PETROLEUM JELLY AIR FRESHNER POWDERED DETERGENT BLEACH BAR/LAUNDRY SOAP MEDICATED SOAP PAINT EMULSION PAINT TEXCOAT BALM RELAXER GLUE/BOND CANDLE ANTISEPTICS(DETTOL) PERFUMES GERMICIDE(IZAL)             CHEMICALS   AND   FORMULATION(%)   1             Water-------------------------------- 25   2             Carbolic acid------------------------0.5   3             Phenol--------------------------------1/2   4             White binder----------------------...

KIm K and daughter look so much alike..........check it out

Kim K left and her daughter North West right! So alike...

60 Percent of Women Won’t Marry a Debtor

  We’ve come a long way since the Mad Men -esque era of the 50s and 60s, when financial security for women came exclusively in the form of a man. At least that’s according to the findings of a new survey from Charlie. We surveyed 533 single (defined as never married) women ages  18 to 40 in to find out how they think about finances when it comes to finding “the one.” According to the results, women are waiting until well into their relationships to have the “money talk.” If they don’t like what they hear, bad news: most women view potential beaus or belles with a large amount of debt as more of a liability, than an anchor. The majority of single women these days don’t believe that marriage is necessarily the ticket to financial stability. But to understand where we’re at now, it’s important to take a look at where we came from. A Brief History of Women’s Financial Rights Back in the “good old days,” our grandmothers had little choice but t...