My oga’s wife is seducing me like Potiphar’s wife did to Joseph – Apprentice cries out

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My father doesn’t know that his last born is actually my child – Man makes shocking revelation

A Nigerian man admitted that, like Joseph and the wife of Potiphar in the Bible, he is tempted by the wife of his employer.

The apprentice claimed that he had less than two years left to complete his apprenticeship under his boss, but the wife had only recently begun seducing him.

He didn’t want to give in to her advances and didn’t want to be falsely accused, so he went online to look for advice on how to handle the situation.

He wrote; “My head wan burst. My Oga wife wan do me Portiphar wife way. This is my 2nd to last year to serve my Oga. Na now she dey seduce me. I dont know what to do. All dis while she just Dey tease me Dey ask me how all my girlfriends. I pretend like I no know she Dey flirt until on Sunday evening.

She call me Dey rub me everywhere. I know say I like woman but I no fit sleep with married woman, let alone my Oga wife. I’m a traditional Igbo guy I know the financial and spiritual consequences. If I say no she can set me up and they will chase me away. Biko How I go handle this one.”

Hauwa Indimi, Laments High Cost Of Tomato

Hauwa Indimi-Yar’adua, the daughter of billionaire oil businessman Mohammed Indimi, has expressed concern about growing prices for food in the country.

Taking to her verified Instagram account, the cosmetologist shared a photo of a small basket of tomatoes she purchased in Abuja for N8,000, adding that she is “still not over it yet.”

She captioned a photo of a basket of tomatoes on Instagram with the words;

I sent my staff to the market, and this is N8k tomatoes as of Monday. On Monday, July 3, she wrote, “I’m still not over it.”

According to the News Agency of Nigeria, due to the increased cost of tomatoes, several housewives in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, have ceased using them for stew and other sauces.

Furthermore, some residents revealed that they have resorted to making stew with garden eggplants and carrots. They claimed that garden eggs, known as ‘ganyen gauta’ in Hausa, ‘igba’ in Yoruba, and ‘anyara’ in Igbo, could blend as well as tomatoes with rice.

Others stated that they were experimenting with pumpkin, pawpaw, or traditional soups such as white soup and palm fruit soup, also known as banga, instead of tomato stew.