In an emotional message, Nollywood star Actress, Chacha Eke Faani announced the end of her seven year old marriage with her husband, Austin Faani.
The beautiful Actress, while not disclosing exactly why her marriage, which produced three lovely children, two girls and a boy, crashed, said she has had enough. Meaning: there’s so much she can endure, and has had it up to her neck.
In the short emotional video, Chacha informed her fans that she was done with the marriage, and would tell her story.
“I’m not crazy, this video is to let the world know that i am done with the marriage, I don’t have a lot to prove that i am done with him but i am done. I am leaving with my life finally. I can’t say a lot now but you will hear my story.”
The couple celebrated their 7th year wedding anniversary this last June of 2020.
It is not known whether she left with her children or not.
Deputy Inspector General of Police in charge of Research and Planning, Olusola Oyabade, will lead a team of Police personnel to supervise next Saturday’s Governorship election in Ondo state.
The Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, who approved the deployment, said the team is to administer the general security arrangement for the election in the State.
In the team are, AIG Karma Hosea Hassan, Assistant Inspector General of Police in charge of Federal Operations (FEDOPS), Department of Operations, Force Headquarters Abuja, and eleven (11) Commissioners of Police.
The Coordinating DIG, Ondo Gubernatorial Elections, has been charged by the IGP to bring his wealth of experience to bear by ensuring due enforcement of all electoral laws throughout the period of the election.
CP Garba Baba Umar will be in charge Monitoring/Evaluation and will be assisted by CP Habu Sani.
Other Senior Police Officers deployed to handle other layers of security in the State are: CP Abiodun Alabi, CP Bishi Omololu, CP Ashafa Kunle, CP Akeera M. Yonous, CP Buba Sanusi, CP Audu Madaki, CP Evelyn Peterside, CP Sadiku Gbenga and CP Abutu Yaro.
Meanwhile, the IGP has warned that no security aides will be allowed to accompany VIPs or political appointees on the day of the election.
Officers and men of the Force, as well as personnel of other security agencies deployed for the election, have also been charged by the IGP to conduct themselves professionally and work in line with best practices as highlighted in the code of conduct and rules of engagement for elections.
He also enjoined members of the public, especially politicians, and their supporters, to cooperate with the Police and other security agencies.
The Ondo State Governorship election is slated for October 10. Already, the Police has marked out 27 areas, mainly in the Coastal areas, that could be prone to violence on that day.
Director General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brig Gen Shuaibu Ibrahim has told Corps Members who would participate in next Saturday’s Governorship election in Ondo state, not to announce results on social media.
He told them that as ad hoc staff, their duty is to conduct the election in line with guidelines of Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC).
Ibrahim, who was in Akure, addressed the Youth Corps members, and expressed the hope that they would build on the performance of their counterparts in Edo State, as part of the process to free and fair election.
He said the visit was important for corps members to remind them on the need to always maintain the neutrality that they were always known for, and not run foul of INEC law.
Shuaibu also charged them not to compromise the integrity of the scheme and be security conscious of their environment.
The DG later visited the Palace of the Deji of Akure where he highlighted the roles of Traditional Institutions as stakeholders in the electoral process.
Ibrahim assured the monarch of adequate support of the Directorate and that of Corps Members posted to the state.
”The traditional institution are also stakeholders in the electoral process, I assure you of the support from the NYSC. Our corps members are ‘digital’ corps members, always tell them what you want. I want to urge you to tap into their resources.”
The Deji of Akure, Oba Aladetoyinbo Aladelusi who assured peaceful poll in the state, said the corps members are the hope of the people who bank their neutrality.
The Police Service Commission has approved the promotion of 175 senior Police Officers. It also stepped down the promotion of 112 others. The decisions were part of the highpoints of the 9th Plenary Meeting of the Commission which held in Abuja on Monday and Tuesday, September 28th and 29th, 2020 and presided over by Commission Chairman, retired Inspector General of Police, Musiliu Smith.
The Commission promoted one Assistant Inspector General of Police, AIG Sanusi Lemu to the rank of Deputy Inspector General of Police, DIG, to replace retired DIG Abdulmajid Ali, representing the North Central. It also approved the promotion of one Commissioner of Police, CP. Mustapha Dandaura, former CP Anambra and Rivers States to the substantive rank of an Assistant Inspector General of Police.
Also promoted were 167 Superintendents of Police to Chief Superintendents, three Deputy Superintendents of Police to Superintendents, two Assistant Superintendents of Police to Deputy Superintendents and four Inspectors to Assistant Superintendents.
The Commission stood down the promotions of 112 senior Police Officers for failure of the Inspector General of Police to comply with the directive of the Commission to attach the Presidential approval for the creation of additional Police Zonal Commands and Departments from where the vacancies for the recommended Officers were harvested.
The Commission stood down the promotion of 13 Commissioners of Police to the next rank of Assistant Inspectors General, eight Deputy Commissioners of Police to Commissioners to Commissioners and 91 Chief Superintendents of Police to Assistant Commissioners.
The 167 Superintendents of Police promoted to Chief Superintendents include; Hezekiah Ali, Chukwuma Johnson Ubasonye, Samson Oyemauche, Ismail Lawal, Oyedele Saka Oyerinde and Nieketien George. Others were; Adamu Garba, Divisional Police Officer, Abakaliki road, Enugu State Command, Ikechukwu Ogoegbunam Udegbunam, Unit Commander, EOD, Jalingo, Taraba State Command, Abiodun Oluwaseun Ayinde, Ogun State Command and Wellinghton Omorogieva among others.
The Commission also confirmed the acting appointments of 60 senior Police Officers including three Commissioners of Police and four Deputy Commissioners.
The beneficiaries are Egbetokun Adeolu, Commissioner of Police Kwara State, Odumosu Olusegun, Commissioner of Police Lagos State and Shehu Usman Shuaibu, Commissioner of Police Works in the Force Headquarters. Others are; Deputy Commissioner of Police Nwonyi Emeka, DCP Ibrahim Maikaba; DCP Ahmed Musa and DCP Jimoh Moshood, former Force Public Relations Officer and currently DCP, CID, Airport Command, Lagos.
The Commission also confirmed the acting appointments of three CSPs, Azogor Edu Jude, Usman Musa, Presidential Villa and Alhassan Idris Gambo. The appointments of three Superintendents of Police were also confirmed. They are Ijomah Chidebere Joseph, Sector Commander, FIB, STS, Enugu, Ogarachi Chima Eze, O/C Marine Command Port Harcourt and Olusegun Osunbure.
The Commission’s decisions are expected to be conveyed to the Inspector General of Police on Monday, October 5th 2020 for implementation, according to a statement signed by Ikechukwu Ani, Head, Press and Public Relations.
Former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose, has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to honourably resign as the President of Nigeria.
Fayose stressed that the only thing that would give Nigerians “unspeakable joy” as the country turns 60 years is the announcement of the resignation of President Buhari.
He alleged that President Buhari’s regime is the worst in Nigeria’s history.
Fayose in his message to mark Nigeria’s 60th Independence Anniversary noted that the country is “presently in coma and on life-support” under Buhari.
In a statement released by his Spokesperson, Lere Olayinka, Fayose said there was nothing to celebrate in a country bedeviled with insecurity, hunger, bare-faced corruption, and bad governance.
“The government is for the people and not the people for the government. It must therefore be accountable to people. The police must also be mindful of the fact that they are part of society.
“The reality is that Nigerians are not happy with the present situation of the country. More so that this present government appears to be the worst in the history of Nigeria.
“Nigerians are not happy about the debts accumulated by this government because they can’t see anything being done with the money borrowed.
“They are angry that they can no longer go to their farms, travel on the roads and even sleep in their homes without the fear of being kidnapped, killed or raped by armed bandits.
“Nobody wants Nigeria to disintegrate. Rather, Nigerians want to live their lives normally without minding which party is in government, and as it appears, living in Nigeria has been made extremely difficult by this government.
“Painfully, most of those who are desirous of leaving the country for greener pastures abroad are unable to do so because advanced countries are banning Nigerians from coming to their countries.
“The already weak shoulders of Nigerians are being made to carry too much burden and they have rights to show their displeasure”, the statement says.
The Ondo State Governor, Mr Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, has described his estranged Deputy, Agboola Ajayi, as “greedy, and someone that lacks contentment”.
According to Akeredolu his Deputy was receiving N13million monthly as running grant which makes him the highest paid Deputy Governor in Nigeria.
But in a swift reaction, Ajayi pointed out that this amount was a peanut, compared to what accrues to the governor’s family monthly from the state purse.
The Governor, who spoke while responding to questions on the state-owned radio station explained that Ajayi had a free hand to operate with unfettered access to all state properties and to his office, stating that two ministries were given to Ajayi to manage but the Deputy Governor was never contented.
“Agboola Ajayi is the highest paid deputy Governor in Nigeria, as I speak. He earns more than the Deputy Governor of Lagos State. He earns over N13 million monthly as running grants for his office.
“Ajayi is just a greedy man that lacks contentment. I gave him a free hand to perform as a deputy governor. I gave him two ministries to run. He constructed roads. He built a number of schools. His wife also built a number of schools. The list is endless.
“Ajayi enjoyed more benefits than his predecessors as a Deputy Governor, but was only greedy. He had a free access to all state properties. He had a free access to me and all documents.
“He was even nick-named Arakunrin Kekere. So, a man that would betray you would betray you no matter how you treat him. I have left Ajayi to God and posterity to judge him” Akeredolu, said.
Reacting to the Governor’s claims, the Deputy Governor stated that he was appalled by the fact that the governor claimed he pockets state resources every month as if he has been doing so illegally and against the law.
A statement by his media aide, Allen Sowore, states: “The Deputy Governor is surprised that the Governor could go to the press, announcing the sum of N13m as what the Deputy Governor gets, as if it was a gift for personal use, and not for the use of his office.
“The Deputy Governor states that what came to his office, until Akeredolu refused to release same, was 12million Naira per month. This includes the imprest of his office, allowances of staff, fuelling of vehicles, care of his residence and welfare of his aides.
“Huge as the amount may appear, it amounts to not so much when the heads and number of individuals it caters for are considered.
“This also pales to nearly nothing when compared to what Akeredolu and members of his family skim off the purse of our state with reckless abandon.
“For instance, the Governor gets a security vote of N750million every month. He, Akeredolu, also gets an imprest of about N150million, his wife, though occupies no constitutionally recognised position, and takes an imprest of N15million naira per month.
“Apart from this, she collects an additional sum of N11million from the Ministry of Women Affairs, which she runs like a potentate.
“Babajide, Akeredolu’s son, is also not left out in the pillage that Akeredolu and his family is visiting on Ondo State. He too takes a whopping N5m monthly, and rips off the state by taking unbelievable commissions as a consultant to the State on almost every imaginable areas.
“All these are apart from millions and millions they get from inflated contracts awarded to family members and lackeys.”
The Deputy Governor is challenging his boss, the Governor, at October 10 election, after he quit the APC, on the platform of the ZLP.
I want to first thank God Almighty the Father of all creation and the maker of Heaven and earth. Strange as it may sound, I would like to thank the colonial heights masters who wove our diverse peoples together and for all the efforts that they put into ensuring that we had everything a people had to launch itself into a modern state. It is a time to thank those brave and selfless missionaries who laid the foundation for our modern civilisation by providing us with high quality education.We must appreciate the context of colonialism and the fact that its driving philosophy was the exploitation of our resources and we must concede that they laid the solid foundation for extracting our resources for the development of their own country. Their interests were buried in the womb of the country they created. Today, we have destroyed the institutions they created and distorted their vision for our development.
2: On October 1, 1960 when we became independent, our joy clearly knew no end. It was my first year in primary school.We all turned out as neat as we could afford to be to hear our Head Master talk about the terrible white men who had come and stolen our lands. I didn’t understand this because I never saw anyone stop my father from going to farm. We played around freely in the village and so, I thought to myself, which land did white people take? I had seen only two white men in my life then. Both of them Priests and even though I did not know fully what a Priest was, they were good men and came from a very far country.
3: They had built a Church and school for our village and that was the first building I saw that was not thatched. It was impossible for me to understand how any white man could be wicked or even steal our land. The teacher talked about a new song which we were to sing in praise of our new country even though I did not see anything that was new. I had no idea what was being said in the song but we all tried to murmur something in excitement. The greatest treasure was the little flags and cups that were distributed to us. Holding to my first cup in my life and waving a little flag seemed like a great contradiction to the Head Master’s portrayal of the white thief.
4: We soon learnt the name of our new Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa the man who came to be known as the golden voice of Africa. In his speech on October 1, 1960, the Prime Minister announced that;our new day had arrived and promised to dedicate his life for the service of the country. He noted that our country had emerged without bitterness and bloodshed and that; building of our nation proceeded at the wisest pace: it has been thorough, and Nigeria now stands well-built upon firm foundations.
5: Barely six years later, we murdered him. He became a symbol of the blood sacrifice that has now drenched our country in a sea of blood arising from a civil war and endless circles of communal bloodletting which have now become part and parcel of our governance structure. Successive leaders have not come to terms with how to end this culture of death. Today, our country is littered with the very sharp pieces of broken promises.
Our Dreams Turns To Nightmare
Yesterday’s dreams have become our worst nightmares. As we look back today, watching our country drift in a wide sea of uncertainty, we ask, from where our help come? (Ps 121: 1). After sixty years, bloodletting has become embedded in our culture of existence. So, how do we celebrate?
6: There is enough blame to go around. We can blame the British, blame the politicians, blame the military but none of these changes anything. It is the fate of nations to go through the furnace and crucible of suffering. Under the banner of religion, Europe fought the 30 years war (1618-1648), the world lost millions of men and women in two wars propelled by human greed (1914-1918, 1939-1945). Fleeing from the Kuomintang army, Mao led his people on the famous long march stretching thousands of miles (1934-1935). Mr. Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom is a metaphor for the struggles against white domination. Journeys to greatness require more than just good people, more than just good will, more than just hope. Those journeys have to be led by men and women with vision and tested character prepared to mobilise their people towards the attainment of a goal.
7: It is easy to say that we have been one unlucky country. The evidence is glaring. One of our Presidents marveled at how a country that had taken so much beating was still standing. In spite of huge resources after 60 years, we cannot feed our people, we cannot keep our people safe, we are still in darkness, we cannot communicate with one another by roads or railways. What we inherited, we have either stolen, broken or thrown away. The nation is a wasteland littered with white elephant projects, conceived and abandoned but all paid for. In Nigeria, governance is a criminal enterprise, not a call to service.
8: No nation has ever taken a short cut to success, not because we have not tried, but because no such road exists. The military, perhaps even worse than the colonial state destroyed the very foundations of our Democracy, Bureaucracy and public service by introducing a culture of arbitrariness and violence as a means to power. A combination of these laid the foundation for corruption as the worst manifestation of a culture of total lack of accountability. To be sure, when General Abdusalami A. Abubakar broke with the military tradition of clutching to power in 1999, he laid a foundation for the return to Democracy and a retreat of the military. We thank God that after over 20 years, we have conducted five back to back elections even in the most controversial of circumstances. After 16 years of being ruled by one political party, the nation decided it was fed up with arrogance and blatant thieving and looting that had become the political culture. Its citizens made a radical and unprecedented turn.
9: In 2014, the unexpected happened: a sitting President conceded defeat against the run of play and even well before the tally of all the votes had come in. The nation, well across ethnic, religions, regional and class lines believed it had turned the corner. The new President had campaigned on a rich menu of promises, ending corruption, ending Boko Haram, ending poverty, uniting the country among others. He ushered in his administration by promising to uphold the Constitution and said he would “belong to everyone and to no one”. We all looked up in hope to a man who had campaigned on the key philosophy of Integrity and Character.
Under Buhari, Nepotism Reigns
10: Today, the tide has turned. The President has turned his back on almost all the key promises he made to the people of Nigeria during his campaign. Our country now looks like a boiling pot that everyone wants to escape from. Nepotism has become the new ideology of this government. In following this ideology, it is estimated that the President has handed over 85% of the key positions to northern Muslims and has ensured that men of his faith hold tight to the reins of power in the most critical areas of our national life; the National Assembly and the Security Agencies!
11: In chapter 2 of our Constitution, under Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy, the Constitution states very clearly and unambiguously in Section 13 that: “It shall be the duty and responsibility of all organs of government, and of all authorities and persons, exercising legislative, executive or judicial powers, to conform to, observe and apply the provisions of this Chapter of this Constitution.”
President Muhammadu Buhari
Section 14(1) states very clearly that: “The Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be a State based on the principles of democracy and social justice.” Article (b) follows by stating that: “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government”, and subsection 3, states that: “The composition of the Government of the Federation or any of its agencies and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner as to reflect the federal character of Nigeria and the need to promote national unity, and also to command national loyalty, thereby ensuring that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few States or from a few ethnic or other sectional groups in that Government or in any of its agencies.”
Buhari, Violates The Constitution And Nigerians
12: By adopting Nepotism as a primary ideology, clearly unable to secure our country and people, President Muhammadu Buhari is in flagrant violation of the Constitution which he swore to uphold. Today, our sense of national unity is severely under threat and test. Our common citizenship has been fractured and diminished. The principles of equity, fairness and egalitarianism on which our Constitution hangs have been assaulted and diminished.
13: Nigerian citizens feel collectively violated. There is clearly a conflict in narratives and understanding between the principles and ideologies contained in the Manifesto of the Party on which he campaigned and the brutal realities of today. It would seem that it was in anticipation of this dissonance that the President built such a firewall of protection around himself by the partisan selection of Security Chiefs based on religious and ethnic affiliation. It could be the reason for the adoption of the same principles in the National Assembly today. The President has been quite diligent and focused in the pursuit of an Agenda that is clearly alien to the aspirations and hopes of our people across religious lines. Nigeria was nothing like this before he came. How long will this lie last before it melts in our faces? We are living a lie and we know it.
14: The motto of our dear nation reads: Unity and Faith, Peace and Progress. Today, where is Nigeria’s Unity? Today, who has Faith in Nigeria? Today, where is the Peace? Today, where is the Progress? The whole world stood with Nigeria sixty years ago expecting us to lead Africa and beyond. TIME Magazine on December 5th, 1960 made our Prime Minister its Man of Year. No black person had been conferred with this honour. Where are we today with that trust?
15: At the end of his speech 60 years ago, our beloved Prime Minister thanked the missionaries for the great work they had done in Nigeria. We as a Church are still on out duty post, following the legacy of those who have gone before us. The Catholic Bishops spent the last forty days praying every day for an end to the killings. As we celebrate our independence today, I call on the President to please urgently make a turn and heed the voices of Nigeria’s friends and the rest of the world.
16: We all face a dilemma: it is our national day but how can we sing a song when our country has become a Babylon? Where are the Chibok daughters? Where is Leah Sharibu? Who are the sponsored murderers who have overrun our land? Our land is now a pool of blood. Mr. President, please reset the clock before it is too late. I pray for you that God will touch your heart so that you embrace the ideals of those who came before you. This is not the Nigeria they dreamt of. This is not the Nigeria you went to war for. With hope in God, but sorrow in my heart, I say to Nigerians, let us stand together. Let us renew our faith. Our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed (Rom. 13:11). God bless our beloved fatherland
Kukah, PhD, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, presented this address on October 1, Nigeria’s Independence Day
President Muhammadu Buhari is being lashed by the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, over his Independence Day speech.
The PDP described the economic assertions in Buhari’s speech as a huge slap on the sensibilities of Nigerians.
The Party charged President Buhari to wake up to reality and take demonstrable urgent steps that will address the divisive tendencies and poor economic policies of his administration, which are fast decimating the Nation under his watch.
PDP, in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbodiyan, says that President Buhari’s attempt to justify the increase in fuel price by comparing it to the N168 per liter cost in Saudi Arabia is a morbid joke, noting that the minimum wage in Saudi Arabia is N305,113 (3000 Saudi Riyals), ten times higher than Nigeria’s paltry N30,000 which is largely unimplemented.
“Is Mr. President not aware that, on the average, a person working in Saudi Arabia earns around 4,230SAR (N430, 267) to 16,700 SAR (N1,698,693) per month?
‘Our party charges Mr. President to always check his books before making such offensive comparisons including the price in Egypt where monthly average earning is around N222, 841 (9,200 EGP) against our N30,000.
“In comparing our costs with other countries such as Ghana, Chad and Niger where purchasing powers of citizens are much more higher, did Mr. President reflect on the cost of house rent, education, healthcare and average dependence on fuel for daily survival by ordinary citizens as obtainable in Nigeria?
“If the flawed assertions as evident in Mr. President’s speech are a direct reflection of how policies are formulated in his administration, then one needs not wonder why our economy is in doldrums.
“Indeed, it is imperative to state that if the Buhari administration had summoned the competence and honesty to continue the programs already laid by previous administrations under our party to revive our refineries, and provide infrastructural backbone for our productive sector, fuel price will not be more than N100 per liter, in addition to the gains from by-product from crude oil.
“The PDP, therefore, urges Mr. President to engender harmony and productivity by allowing for more robust discourse that will lead to affordable prices for fuel and other essential commodities in our country.”
Ologbodiyan stressed that the PDP also holds as ludicrous that President Buhari is hyping his ‘better together’ theme when the administration he heads, runs on nepotism, disregard for rule of law, human right abuses, corruption, political intolerance, suppression of free speech and aggression towards dissenting voices.
The Party, however, urged the President Buhari administration to end his rhetoric and take practical steps to entrench the culture of rule of law, and strengthen harmonious living through inclusiveness, equity in wealth distribution, and equal access to opportunities for all Nigerians irrespective of creed, class, and ethnicity.
“Furthermore, credible elections are essential to harmonious living. Our party, therefore, restates our commendation to Mr. President for his new found commitment to non-interference in elections leading to conduct of free, fair and credible governorship election in Edo State on September 19.
“We urge President Buhari to toe the line of the Edo election in the October 10, 2020 Ondo governorship election so as to consolidate the legacy of free and fair election under his watch.
“Additionally, Mr. President should exert himself on rebuilding our economy by ending his borrowing spree and focusing on our productive capacity instead of his endless lamentation over his failures.
“Moreover, security is pivotal to our economic revival. The unceasing acts of insurgency, banditry and kidnapping in the last five years have wrecked our nation’s productivity and threatened her corporate existence.
“It is therefore worrisome that Mr. President’s speech did not address the call on him by Nigerians demanding that he rejigs his security architecture to inject new blood that will effectively confront our security challenges.
“Our party restates our belief in the potentials of our nation and urges Mr. President to seek help by engaging more competent hands to assist in handling the affairs of our nation”, the Party stated.
The President’s fuel price comparisons in his Independence day speech angered not a few Nigerians.
There are palpable fears in Ekiti State, as the Police Command revealed, and raised an alarm over the presence of armed aliens in the State.
Security has, therefore, been raised to the highest level.
The Command, in a statement, said it discovered through intelligence gathering that some groups of persons suspected to be armed hoodlums and criminally minded aliens have concluded plans to enter the state to unleash evil, cause havoc and create apprehension.
The statement, signed by the Command’s spokesman, ASP Sunday Abutu, indicated that the hoodlums will arrive the state with the pretence of settling down peacefully with their host communities while the other set will come later to launch an attack and cause havoc.
“The Command wishes to state that this does not call for panic rather, it is a call for an effective and enhanced Community Policing.
“In view of this, the Commissioner of Police, Ekiti State Command, implores all and sundry to be security conscious, extremely vigilant and report to the police immediately any suspected person or group of persons arriving, residing or found roaming about in their environs.
“The Commissioner, also, implores land owners, landlords and agents to be conscious of, and know the identities of those they accommodate, let or sell their properties to in order to avoid accommodating ,or harboring, criminals who may, in turn, threaten the peace of the Society.”
It advised commercial drivers and motorcyclists to be watchful and report to the Police, immediately, any suspected traveller arriving any part of the State.
The Command assured the people of the state of its prompt response to ensuring the safety of lives and properties.
President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, and his wife Melania, are Coronavirus-positive.
President Trump revealed this Friday morning.
Trump: “Tonight, @FLOTUS and I tested positive for COVID-19. We will begin out quarantine and recovery process immediately. We will get through this TOGETHER.”
It is not known when the couple contracted the Virus, but Trump has never taken, very seriously, the Virus, and had broken all the protocols, including the use of facemask.
He, frequently, condemned the use of facemask, and in their first debate, mocked the Democratic Party candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden, for wearing facemasks in public.
He has disagreed with Scientists, and the Agency in charge of disease control in the US, CDC on the best way to manage the Virus which has killed thousands of Americans, and affected millions.
Trump and his wife follow a long list of high profile world citizens who had fallen victim to COVID-19.