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Blackmail Attempt By American Lady On Keyamo’s Family Hits The Rocks

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…Documents Expose Her

An orchestrated campaign of blackmail and slander against the Keyamo family has collapsed under the weight of incontrovertible evidence. The accuser, American-Ugandan citizen, Haidi Zaineb Rambo, now stands exposed as a manipulative opportunist who sought to extort and defame the very people who had extended overwhelming kindness to her and her family during a period of crisis.

Findings revealed that Zaineb re-entered the lives of the Keyamos in mid-2023, shortly after the appointment of Festus Keyamo SAN as Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development. She reconnected with his sister, Ruth Keyamo Omonigho, whom she had known years earlier but had been estranged from since 2020. Under the guise of rekindled friendship, she pleaded for assistance with her mother’s worsening health condition and her own dire financial state in New York. Claiming she could no longer afford medical bills or even house rent, she begged Ruth to intervene.

Zaineb [white T-shirt, her mother and Ruth]
Zaineb [white T-shirt, her mother and Ruth]

Ruth, unable to meet the request alone, turned to her family for help. At her urging, Minister Keyamo met Zaineb in New York during a working visit and rendered financial support that enabled her to relocate her mother to Uganda. However, as her mother’s condition deteriorated, Zaineb again appealed for help. The Keyamo family, moved by compassion, facilitated her and her mother’s travel to Nigeria for advanced treatment, covering logistics, medical bills, and accommodation.
Zaineb’s mother was admitted to ASK Medical and Diagnostics in Maitama, Abuja, upon arrival on December 22, 2023, according to verifiable hospital records. Documents also confirm the family bore the full cost of treatment, with receipts showing payments north of N20m for Zaineb’s own medical care and her mother’s at the facility.

When ASK Medical could no longer manage the case due to the complexity of her condition, diagnosed as severe heart disease and end-stage kidney failure, the patient was transferred to Zenith Medical and Kidney Center (ZMKC). The Keyamos continued to fund dialysis and medications with payments topping another N20m.

Festus Keyamo & Zaineb met at a function in New York during an event at the sidelines of the UNGA on Sept 21, 2023
Festus Keyamo & Zaineb met at a function in New York during an event at the sidelines of the UNGA on Sept 21, 2023

Despite all efforts, Zaineb’s mother passed away on 22 May 2024, with the official cause listed as septic shock. Throughout this period, the Keyamos not only shouldered medical costs but also extended emotional support, with Ruth making regular visits and attending to funeral arrangements. The family paid for the embalming, mortuary, casket, and repatriation of the corpse to Uganda. Ruth was even seen accompanying Zaineb on shopping trips and to burial planning meetings.

Beneath this surface of humanitarian support, deeper deception emerged. Zaineb according to findings, had entered Nigeria not only with her mother but with a four-year-old boy, Prinston. She initially claimed the boy was her nephew, only to later switch the story, saying he was her biological son. Pressed for adoption papers or parental consent, she failed to produce any. Under pressure, Zaineb allegedly admitted to forging a Ugandan passport for the boy and confessed to faking the signature of James Marino, her ex-partner and father of her daughter in the U.S., to obtain a visa for her teenage daughter. These actions raised grave concerns of child trafficking.

Even her age was falsified. Zaineb paraded a passport showing 1990 as her birth year, while authentic documents pegged her actual date of birth at 1980, according to documents in her possession —exposing yet another attempt to manipulate perception for sympathy and financial gain, creating the illusion of a young, struggling single mother.

Recognising the signs of a possible child trafficking offense, the Keyamo family took steps to involve the Nigerian Immigration Service. When faced with authorities, Zaineb refused to cooperate, even going so far as to hide international passports in a chair to avoid deportation. It took official intervention to deport her and the trafficked child to Uganda on 7 June 2024. The mother’s remains were sent on a separate flight the next day with all the necessary documentation and financial support, even after her deception had been uncovered. Additional funds were even sent via the Ugandan Airline country manager, according to findings.

The final straw came when Zaineb, rather than showing gratitude, began demanding extravagant funeral funds, starting with a ₦5 million casket and themed burial clothes for extended family in Uganda. When the Keyamos rightly drew the line and refused to fund such excesses, she resorted to emotional blackmail and threats. Her demands, captured in WhatsApp chats and photos, escalated until it became clear that she had no intention of leaving Nigeria unless a hefty sum was paid.

Months after her deportation, Zaineb reportedly contacted a family acquaintance named Sani, admitting that the US government had helped her return to America after being stranded in Uganda for five months. According to accounts, she shamelessly begged for more financial help, and when denied, launched her campaign of blackmail against the Keyamos. Her subsequent false accusations, now proven baseless, were an apparent attempt to force the family into submission through public defamation. Yet, her lies have fallen flat, overwhelmed by documented evidence of the family’s integrity and unwavering support throughout her ordeal.

This is not the common story of a wronged woman, it is the brow-raising story of a deceitful individual who sought to exploit the goodwill of a well-meaning family for personal gain. Every document, from hospital receipts to immigration reports, confirms one unshakable truth: the Keyamo family acted with humanity, decency, and generosity throughout. Unfortunately, what they received in return was betrayal.

The facts speak for themselves. The documents are damning. And the attempt at blackmail? Dead on arrival. The evidence is overwhelming. The defamer has been exposed. The truth, firmly supported by evidence, sufficiently makes this more than obvious.

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Kwara APC Crisis: Group Urges Tinubu to Remain Neutral in Party Dispute

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A civil society group, the Centre for Citizens Participation and Democratic Development, has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to remain neutral in the ongoing crisis within the All Progressives Congress in Kwara State.

In a statement issued by its Executive Director, Prof. AbdulKareem Adedeji, the group warned against any action that could create the impression that the Presidency had taken sides in the dispute arising from the party’s recent primaries.

The group expressed concern over reports that a delegation aligned with Kwara State Governor, AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, plans to visit Abuja to meet key political leaders and the President.

It alleged that the move could be interpreted as an attempt to project an image of unity despite lingering disagreements within the party.

According to the statement, the controversy surrounding the APC primaries, particularly the governorship primary, has continued to generate concerns among party elders, lawmakers, aspirants, youth groups, civil society organisations and other stakeholders.

It noted that the dispute has led to public advocacy campaigns, stakeholder engagements and legal actions.

The group cautioned that any perceived endorsement of one faction by the Presidency could deepen divisions within the party and undermine efforts toward reconciliation.

It also urged traditional rulers to avoid involvement in partisan political activities, stressing that royal fathers should remain neutral and serve as custodians of peace, unity and justice.

Adedeji maintained that President Tinubu, as leader of the nation, should act as a father to all stakeholders by promoting fairness, inclusion and dialogue rather than allowing the Presidency to be drawn into unresolved state-level political disputes.

He called for genuine reconciliation within the APC in Kwara State, insisting that concerns over the primaries should be addressed transparently to preserve public confidence, party unity and democratic credibility.

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Draper Energized For Eastbourne Return, Inspired By Murray

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Draper is set to make his comeback at Eastbourne after a grueling 11-month spell plagued by injury, revitalized by his “very special” bond with coach Andy Murray and the Scot’s unwavering confidence in his abilities. Draper will be making his return to the court in more than two and a half months at the Eastbourne International on Monday. This will be his first competitive event since enlisting the help of his idol and childhood friend, Andy Murray, as his coach, and follows an almost year-long layoff due to a persistent arm and knee injuries.

He’ll be hoping to sharpen up in time for Wimbledon, which is now only a week and a bit away.

“His tennis knowledge is phenomenal,” said Draper about Murray. “My tennis is actually in a really, really good spot,” he added, referring to his physical condition, “I’ve lost a lot of confidence in my body over the last year that I’m rebuilding back again.”

He also stressed the impact of having Murray by his side, “Having someone who believes in you as a person, as a player who’s one of your biggest inspirations… I have a great relationship with him off the court – our relationship is very special – and that gives me a bit more energy, especially in a moment where I’m coming back and I need to have that good energy around me.” Just 12 months ago Draper was enjoying a stellar run of good form, achieving a career-high ranking of 4 in the world, but the last 11 months have been a miserable saga of injuries and pain.

Draper, 24, has not competed since the start of April after he withdrew from the Barcelona Open, suffering knee tendinitis.

The knee injury had itself come after seven months out with a bone bruise in his left arm sustained in a fall, causing him to slip to world No 113. (AP) Jack Draper at work under the watchful eye of Andy Murray in Eastbourne. Photograph: Charlie Crowhurst/Getty Images for LTA. Despite the setback, Draper always felt he would eventually make it back.

He did, however, concede, “I was absolutely not” psychologically sound over the past year. “It’s been an incredibly tough year,” Draper said. “I’m someone who’s all-in with my tennis.

I’m obsessed with improving and getting better and being the best in the world and doing all the right things.”

“Outside of tennis, there’s not a lot going on for me. So it’s obviously been very difficult, very isolated, a lot of tough days, a lot of training. As a competitor, all you want to do is feel the buzz of being out there competing. I’ve had to be incredibly patient with my body.”

Draper admits that he accepts that his arm may “never go away,” but has no doubts about achieving the career he feels he deserves.

“I was top 10 in the world, doing great things, and you’re losing your ranking every week,” he said. “It’s not like a football team where you can have a substitute come in and take your place. It’s like you’re watching your decline.

So it’s tough, but I think I’ve learned a massive amount about my body in the last year and my recovery.” As for the benefits that might come from such a troubled period, Draper believes they’ll provide an edge. “Before, in the position I was, I still felt like maybe there’s mental levels I needed to go to to get to where I wanted to be,” he said.

“And even though my ranking slipped and I haven’t played, when you go through a lot of struggles and a lot of setbacks, it definitely gives you the mental fortitude to think: ‘I’ve got something a little bit extra to these guys because of what I’ve gone through.’”

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Serena Williams Returns To Wimbledon Singles With Wildcard

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Serena Williams will step back onto Centre Court at Wimbledon this summer, returning to singles competition after being granted the final wildcard by the All England Club.

The announcement ends months of speculation about whether the 23-time Grand Slam champion would attempt a singles comeback. Williams, 44, retired from professional tennis at the 2022 U.S. Open, but her decision to resume doubles earlier this season hinted at unfinished business.

Her return to singles marks her first appearance in nearly four years, reigniting excitement among fans and raising questions about how competitive she can be at this stage of her career.

Williams is a seven-time Wimbledon singles champion, with her last triumph coming in 2016. However, her recent experiences at the tournament have been difficult. In 2021, she suffered a serious hamstring injury in the opening round. A year later, she lost to Harmony Tan in the first round, a defeat many believe influenced her determination to return.

She has not won a singles match at Wimbledon since 2019, making this comeback both a challenge and an opportunity to end her career at the All England Club on a stronger note.

Williams resumed competitive play in doubles earlier this month, partnering Victoria Mboko at Queen’s Club before Mboko withdrew due to injury. She later teamed up with Karolina Muchova in Berlin, losing in the opening round but expressing satisfaction with her performance.

Since then, she has been training on the grass courts at Wimbledon, preparing for the physical demands of singles competition. While doubles requires less movement, singles will test her endurance and agility.

The All England Club had only one singles wildcard left when the announcement was made. With the qualifying draw set to be published, officials confirmed Williams as the recipient, ensuring her place in the main draw.

Her inclusion adds star power to the tournament and offers fans the chance to witness one of the sport’s greatest champions compete again on the iconic grass courts.

Williams’s comeback is not just about results. At 44, she faces the reality that singles tennis demands far more physically than doubles. Yet her career has been defined by defying expectations.

Her victory over then-world No. 2 Anett Kontaveit at the 2022 U.S. Open showed she could still compete at the highest level. Whether she can replicate that form at Wimbledon remains uncertain, but her presence alone elevates the tournament.

The news has sparked excitement across the tennis world. Fans and analysts see her return as a chance to close her Wimbledon chapter differently. For many, it is less about titles and more about celebrating her enduring influence on the sport.

Serena Williams’s singles comeback at Wimbledon is both a sporting and symbolic moment. With a wildcard entry, she has the chance to rewrite her final chapter at the All England Club. Whether she advances deep into the draw or not, her return underscores her refusal to shy away from challenges and her lasting impact on tennis.

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