{"id":11404,"date":"2015-11-24T16:42:35","date_gmt":"2015-11-24T15:42:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/buzznigeria.com\/?p=11404"},"modified":"2022-07-10T06:24:56","modified_gmt":"2022-07-10T05:24:56","slug":"facts-about-aswad-ayinde-the-man-who-got-his-daughters-pregnant","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/buzznigeria.com\/facts-about-aswad-ayinde-the-man-who-got-his-daughters-pregnant\/","title":{"rendered":"Facts About Aswad Ayinde: The Man Who Got His Daughters Pregnant"},"content":{"rendered":"
Aswad Ayinde (Born on July 16, 1958, a.k.a Charles McGill) is a Grammy award-winning African American Music director who became famous for directing the music video for the Fugees\u2019 hit song \u201cKilling Me Softly\u201d in 1996. Sadly, his life took an ugly turn after he was found guilty of sexually abusing his daughters.<\/strong><\/p>\n There is really nothing that is impossible under the sun. Sometimes we hear stories about the bizarre behaviors of some people that will make us wonder if such really ever happened. One of such stories is that of Aswad Ayinde\u00a0<\/strong>– a man who resorted to raping and impregnating his daughters so he could avoid the apocalypse.<\/p>\n Aswad Ayinde, became famous after he directed a music video for the Fugees 1996 smash hit titled ‘Killing Me Softly<\/em>‘. But behind the music world, Ayinde is\u00a0a sexual predator who would sneak into his daughters’\u00a0bedroom at night to teach them “how to be a woman”, a father who turned his daughters to sex toys for no justifiable course.<\/p>\n According to one of his daughters Aziza Kibibi, her father started raping her right from the tender age of 8 and ever since then, he engaged other of his female children in such abusive acts for almost a period of 30 years before he got separated from his wife.<\/p>\n “Initially, I didn’t know it was wrong, I looked to him for confirmation that what he was doing was okay and he told me it was”.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n These were the words of his second\u00a0daughter Aziza when she spoke about her father’s first advances to her\u00a0in 1986. To convince his daughters, Ayinde assures them that he was going to make them better women through his acts and that was what the children carried along with them until they grew up.<\/p>\n “He made what he was doing to me seem like something special. He made me feel privileged.” One of his daughters said.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n