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A Nigerian man has reportedly landed in a hot mess in Australia after he refused to date a woman he promised to be in a relationship with.According to Facebook user, Daniel Chukwuemeka, the affected man wooed the lady with the intention of only having intimate relations but he made her believe that he wanted them to date.
When they met after few days of talking and he got wanted he wanted and decided to renege on their agreement.
Daniel said she reported the guy to the police and he was invited for questioning over breach of agreement.
He could not defend himself because there were screenshots of their chat and it is a punishable offence to violate a relationship agreement in the country, even if they are not married.
The affected man tried to get other Nigerians to speak in his defence but no one agreed because they did not want to ruin their plans to get permanent residency.
The post reads; ”A Nigerian brother is in trouble. He promised to date an Oyibo lady whereas the only thing he wanted was kn**ks. So, after a few days of talking and meeting, brother kn*****d twice (only) within a day and decided to clean mouth. But the lady reported him to the police and accused him of breach of partnership agreement.
Police don invite brother to tell his own side of the story and brother cannot say much because the evidence is there in the chats between him and the lady. Brother now began to look for fellow Nigerians to put in some good word for him because the police say he should get at least two residents to vouch for his goodwill. Failure to do so, the case will be taken to court.
No fellow Nigerian wants to go to the police and vouch for brother because no one wants a dent on their hustle for Australian permanent residency and subsequent citizenship Nigerian police would have probably laughed at the lady’s case, especially since they are not married. Brother forgot he is not in Nigeria.
He was probably thinking with his D. He forgot he lives in a country where marriage is not a big deal, where two people living together over a certain period of time and sharing bills would even be recognised by the state as (de facto) partners without them needing to be legally married.”
Ondomind