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Showing posts from September 18, 2019

Cristiano Ronaldo to marry girlfriend Georgin Rodriguez

Cristiano Ronaldo says he will marry Georgina Rodriguez ‘for sure’ (Picture: Getty Images) Cristiano Ronaldo  says he will marry girlfriend Georgina Rodriguez ‘for sure’. The  Juventus  footballer says model Georgina is ‘the love of my life’ and plans to put a ring on it in the future. Plus, it would make his mum really happy. He praised his girlfriend and the mother of their daughter Alana, telling Piers Morgan in a new interview: ‘She helped me so much. Of course I’m in love with her. ‘We’ll be (married) one day, for sure. It’s my mum’s dream as well. So, one day. Why not? ‘It’s great. She’s my friend. We have conversations. I open the heart for her and she opens the heart for me.’ Cristiano is also dad to son Cristiano Jr, eight, and two-year-old twins Eva and Mateo. The couple, who have been together since 2016, first met at a branch of Gucci where she worked as a sales assistant before meeting again at an event for another brand. The couple share baby daugh

Minimum wage: Workers consider strike option as negotiations breaks down again

Workers under the auspices of the Joint Public Sector Negotiating Council are getting set for a possible industrial action as a meeting of the Federal government and the unions again ended in a deadlock on Monday. The negotiations on the consequential adjustment which was earlier adjourned to September 4 to allow the government team brief President Muhammadu Buhari was again rescheduled for September 16, but suffered another setback as both parties failed to reach an agreement despite minor adjustments in their separate positions. The Nation gathered that at Monday’s meeting which was chaired by the Head of Service of the federation, Winifred Oyo-ita, both government and the union leaders only made minor adjustment to their earlier positions with the government moving from its earlier position of 9.5 percent to 11 percent for grade levels seven to 14 and 6.5 percent from 5.5 percent for levels 15 to 17. The workers have insisted that the government adjust salaries