PAINFUL SHAM MARRIAGE:
‘My NIGERIAN Husband, BEN SOYEMI pretends to love me, but only married me for Visa’-British Woman cries out
…Says: ’25 year old Nigerian hubby flirts with ex-girlfriend in Lagos on Skype daily’
* ‘He used, dump me and humiliated me before my entire family in London’
* ‘He ruined my life, I filed for divorce which he signed after two years’
* Lament: ‘I loved him. We dated for six months on social media, met him having almost expiring student visa’
BY JOY REWANE/CRIME CORRESPONDENT/London
HIS NAME IS BEN SOYEMI, A NIGERIAN STUDENT IN ONE OF THE BRITISH SCHOOLS ON STUDENT VISA. Sensing that his student visa was about to expire, the 25 year old Nigerian began the search for a British lady to whom he wanted to deceive into a fake marriage. He eventually came on social media and met an innocent British lady, Deana Charles, desperate to get married.
Narrating her pain, humiliation and ordeal recently, Deana reportedly lament how she met met Ben, who pretended to love her but only for her to discover she was married purposely so he could obtain British visa. Deana explained how a 25-year-old Nigerian boy married her after just six months of meeting him on social media just so that he could get a visa, popularly called ‘green card’ in this part.
Charles said she was humiliated, degraded and taken for a ride by the sharp ‘Naija’ student who hit on her while a student in the UK and seeing that his student visa was about to expire, he saw in her a ticket for her stay and had to get on with the sham marriage especially when she found out half an hour after their wedding that the guy was busy texting some love messages to another woman in Nigeria.
Deana, a Sales assistant from Tiverton, Devon, said she met Ben on a dating site in 2010 and was instantly attracted to his looks and was hooked after he struck up a flirty conversation with her; he proposed to her after six months.
Her word:
“”My
whole world came crashing down when I found out my marriage was a
fake. I loved Ben with all my heart. We’d made loads of plans for
the future and he seemed desperate to start a family
“I wasn’t serious about finding love, I’d only signed up for a bit of a laugh. As soon as I saw Ben’s picture, though, I was smitten. He had gorgeous brown eyes and a great body — just my type. We started chatting and he explained he’d come to the United Kingdom from Nigeria to study for a business degree. I couldn’t imagine being so far away from my family and friends and I told him he was really brave.
“When we finally met after so much pressure from him, it was the perfect first date. Ben took me to see Big Ben and we went to the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich. As soon as we shared our first kiss, I could feel myself falling for him. He asked me to stay for a few days and I said yes. It felt like I’d known him for ages.
“After a fleeting visit home to pick up some belongings, I agreed to move in with Ben in Catford, South East London. I was surprised when he asked me to move in with him so soon but I was also really excited. But my mum was really concerned that I was giving up everything for someone I’d only just met. Some of my friends said the same. No one was completely sure of him. I just shrugged off their concerns because I was convinced he was the right man for me.
“Ben asked me to marry him six months later while we were having breakfast at home. It wasn’t very romantic. He didn’t even get down on one knee, but he did buy me an imitation diamond ring. I was shocked he wanted to marry me so soon but I was completely in love.
“The wedding was at a register office in January 2012, with a low-key reception at a local Chinese restaurant. My family were concerned but they all turned out and supported me. When I walked down the aisle Ben told me I looked stunning. And I meant every word of my vows. He was reluctant to get his phone out. He eventually agreed to call his mum but when I looked over his shoulder at the screen, a message flashed up from a girl. She’d texted Ben to tell him she loved and missed him.
“My legs turned to jelly as I remembered she was his ex-girlfriend in Nigeria. I was in pieces but Ben begged me for another chance. He said he’d only text her because of last-minute nerves. I didn’t want to storm out of my wedding so, after lots of tears, I let it go.
“I wanted to wait a few years before getting pregnant as I was still worried about the message. But Ben was determined to be a dad. I thought it was his way of showing he was serious. We tried for a baby but we struggled to conceive.”
But 13 months into their marriage, Deana borrowed Ben’s laptop and her worst fears were confirmed:
“My heart stopped when I saw he’d been sending messages to a girl on a social network site and she had sent him explicit pictures. Ben told her he loved her and wanted a baby with her. Minutes later, I received a message from the girl – she felt so guilty, she’d messaged me to come clean.
When he realised there was no way back, he told me he’d only married me for a visa. It explained why he’d been so keen to get me pregnant, the authorities would find it harder to deport him.”
Distraught Deana packed her bags, fled home to Devon the next day and filed for divorce. After two years, Ben finally agreed to it.
“I felt relieved. Looking back, I realise how naive I was. Ben was due to finish his degree when he proposed, which meant his student visa would expire. He had to get me up the aisle as soon as possible,” added the British woman.