Mary Njoku Blasts Merit Gold Over Her Message To Wives
Nollywood actress and filmmaker Mary Njoku has slammed her junior colleague, Merit Gold, over her message to wives.
Hours ago, Merit Gold educated women on another meaning of cheating.
The upcoming actress, via her Instagram page, stated that, as a woman, assisting your family secretly without consenting to your husband is also cheating. She reminded them that their husband paid their bride’s price.
Her statement didn’t sit right with many. Taking to a blog’s comment section, Mary Njoku slammed her as she stated that greeting one’s mother without consent is also cheating.
She wrote, “Greeting your mother without his consent is cheating too. He paid in full. As all of us don dey ment na”.
Her comment received many likes and comments.
One Ego Umez wrote, “Don’t mind her; some of them will even make their husbands wonder if they’ve got anything left up there
One Kayz Bae22 wrote, “I tire. What if he is assisting his family without his wife’s consent
One MS_Lotee wrote, “Omor na mental case start to dry craze. Even head of house needs some mentoring too. As na human beings dem be oh!
One Hajia Yunusa1 wrote, “Serious one
One Elegant Veemart wrote, “Exactly. Even asking them how they’re doing is cheating as well”.
A few weeks ago, in the wake of Junior Pope’s death, Mary Njoku threw a question at Nigerians, questioning why Nigerians seize every chance to criticize grieving widows.
She noted that even when a husband dies in a plane crash along with other victims, some will still find a way to blame it on the wife, believing that she orchestrated it spiritually.
Recall that last year, in the wake of the Moyo Lawal s3x tape scandal, Mary blasted Nigerians for blaming Moyo. She questioned why Nigerians always love to blame the victims.
She had also questioned why Nigerians seize every chance to criticize grieving widows, from Mohbad’s wife to Junior Pope’s wife.
She noted that even when a husband dies in a plane crash along with other victims, some will still find a way to blame it on the wife, believing that she orchestrated it spiritually.