Nollywood Porn Star, Afrocandy’s Dirty Secrets Revealed By Her Ex-Husband
Looking
at things happening to Judith Opara Mazagwu, aka Afrocandy, Nigerian artiste
based in the United States, it appears that controversy is gradually becoming
her second name.
First,
her Porn videos caused a stir on the Internet and major blogs, to the extent
that angry Nigerians fired her hate mails.
Afrocandy
had told Daily Sun, in an interview published on September 3, 2010, that she
didn’t dump her US-based husband, Boltin Mazagwu. She said:
“There
has been lots of rumours going on about my marriage and it is only a few people
who know the truth. The fact is, I did not leave my husband; my husband rather
left, due to some gossip he heard about something that happened back in Nigeria
before I joined him in the US.
I begged
him and he came back. When he left the second time that pushed me to give him a
restraining order. I really would not like to go into details because I see
that as past and I will like the past to remain where it belongs because I have
moved on; talking about it takes me backward.”
More Juicy stuff after the cut:
More Juicy stuff after the cut:
This is some long stuff but you will
find interesting or not. Afrocandy is not strange to you
especially if you took that hypocritical glance at the soft-porn movie she just
churned out and left your mouth agape while watching everything. The Nigerian
web was all over her content. Anyway, an article dated as far behind as 2011
was written about her and lunge into immorality in films, you’ll be glad to
read it. Her ex-husband says a bit in this article.
Boltin
Elumelu Mazagwu, the artiste’s husband, read the interview online and furiously
had to do a reply.
In
his reaction, he accused Judith of cheating on him while their marriage lasted.
According to her ex
husband, Judith had an affair with her landlord and neighbours, she called her
boyfriend her uncle and DNA shows that he is not the father of her their second
child which she later admitted.
Looking at things happening to Judith Opara Mazagwu, aka
Afrocandy, Nigerian artiste based in the United States, it appears that
controversy is gradually becoming her second name. First, the video of her
current work, Ikebe Na Moni, caused a stir on the Internet and major blogs, to
the extent that angry Nigerians fired her hate mails. Currently, her marriage
is a subject of controversy.
Boltin Elumelu Mazagwu, the artiste’s husband, who read
the interview on line, has been furious. In his reaction, he accused Judith of
cheating on him while their marriage lasted. He also said that a DNA test has
revealed that he is not the biological father of their second daughter.
Revealing how he met Judith, Mazagwu said: “I worked a
while is Lagos before I relocated to USA. I came for holidays with my siblings
and my uncle arranged for me to get a wife. There were three ladies he wanted
me to meet and choose from. On my way to check out these ladies, I met Judith,
my ex-wife.
Because I like fair complexioned ladies, I took her in my car and we got talking. She told me that her name was Sandra, which I later found out was false. She told me she was a student of IMT, Enugu, which was also false. She never enrolled at IMT. When I offered to drive her to her home, she told me she was staying with her uncle. I discovered that the said uncle was her boyfriend. My friend at Onitsha, Omoba, revealed these to me.
Because I like fair complexioned ladies, I took her in my car and we got talking. She told me that her name was Sandra, which I later found out was false. She told me she was a student of IMT, Enugu, which was also false. She never enrolled at IMT. When I offered to drive her to her home, she told me she was staying with her uncle. I discovered that the said uncle was her boyfriend. My friend at Onitsha, Omoba, revealed these to me.
“The following day, I went to pick her up and we went to
Enugu. After shopping at Onitsha, we came to Lagos, to the apartment where I
lived at Ajao Estate. When I was going back to the US, I left the apartment for
her. I was sending her money, although I had a hunch about her lifestyle. I
remember telling her the day we met that my people won’t allow me marry an
Owerri woman, since she told me she was from Owerri. After three months, I came
to Nigeria and spent 11 months here with her. At this time, I had abandoned the
idea of marrying the Onitsha lady I was supposed to marry. Judith and I stayed
in a hotel because I lost my job and abandoned college back in New York. I got broke
at some point during that period and I moved in with a friend, Christopher, at
Okota. He really didn’t want me to marry Judith and it was a fight between us.
He actually pushed Judith out of the house. People we stayed in their homes
refused her.”
He said that members of her family opposed his
relationship with Judith, but he ignored their position. He said: “They
vehemently opposed our union and yet I wouldn’t listen. It was war in my
family. My mum and my aunt didn’t want her. My people didn’t want me to marry
her, even when she had become pregnant with her child; they told her after I
managed to go back to New York, that they would gladly take the baby from her
if she delivered, but that I would never marry her.
“When I returned again, I
went to her parents; they appealed to me and told me that their people never
get divorced once they are married. I respected their opinion because they are
good Christians. When I went back to USA, my cousin who trades at Balogun gave
her N200, 000.00 in 1995. You know the value of money at that time, but I paid
back in dollar equivalent. All these were attempts to make sure that she got an
apartment, which she did at No. 2 Alhaji Azeez Street Mafoluku, Oshodi, Lagos.
Before the introduction of Western Union Money Transfer, I was sending money to
her constantly. There was this African American publication called JET. I would
put money in between the pages, seal it and sent it through Red Star every
week. When Western Union came, my name became a household name at Oba Akran
branch of Union Bank.”
He said this continued until, “2002 when she started
talking about acting in movies. I objected to that and maintained that I didn’t
want her to go into acting. I needed her to take care of the kids, full time
and also to get her busy. We quarrelled over it that night and I almost gave up
on her, but because of my polygamous background and knowing what growing up was
for us, the idea of leaving her was knocked off. I also love my children,
Annabel and Angel, so much because at that time, I didn’t know that Angel was
fathered by another man.”
When asked what he meant by ‘another man fathered Angel,
Mazagwu said: “When she sent me her pictures, I suspected, from the child’s
facial features that she didn’t look like me. When I complained, she told me
that the girl took after my mother’s people. She stopped at nothing to make me
believe all her lies. She is a pathological liar. When I confronted her with
the DNA results, she confessed that indeed, I am not Angel’s father and rationalised
her actions to loneliness and temptation.”
On his allegation that his wife had multiply partners,
he said: “In the apartment I rented for her, she had affairs with the landlord
because she lied about her marital status. She didn’t tell the man she was
married. It was only when trouble broke out that the landlord knew her real
status. Also, a guy across the street, named Goddy from Abia State, laid
accusations on her. She couldn’t deny this. I know Goddy; whenever I came to
town, she would tell me that Goddy was a chief from Abia State and I took them
that way, not knowing they were dating.”
One how the bubble burst, the angry ex-hubby said: “She
started leaving the kids all by themselves. She would leave them and hit the
clubs. I was boiling, but she had gone full circle. So, in January 2006, I came
to Nigeria to investigate the whole thing and discovered everything was true.
Before I returned from Nigeria she ran to the child support in the US to file a
report that I had abdicated my responsibility. She went to the Nigeria Catholic
community to complain. When I returned and told the church what had happened,
it was shocking to them.