‘Mothers Are To Be Blamed For ‘Yahoo’, ‘Hook-Up’ Cultures’ –Music Producer, K-Solo Unapologetically Voices His Thought With His Recent Encounter
Nigerian music producer, Solomon Oyeniyi who is popularly known as K-Solo, has claimed that women are to be blamed for the menaces of internet fraud and prostitutions among Nigeria youths.
Speaking in a recent interview with Arise TV, he stated that mothers are the biggest disasters as they are the ones who enable their children to be involved in these vices.
The beat-maker recalled a encounter her had with a mother and her teenager daughter. According to K-Solo, the young girl was heading out of her house and he heard the mother tell her to bring something back.
He said he confronted the mother, asking where her child works because she was dressed so fine and looked too good to be going to the office in that dress, she she couldn’t answer him. He went further to address the woman, asking what she was doing at home while the poor girl goes out to hustle for her.
However, the beatmaker also blamed female celebrities for negatively influencing young girls by flaunting their luxurious lifestyles on social media.
In his words:
“Hook-up in Nigeria is now like ordering food. It’s almost normal. They even defend it by saying it happens abroad. But I think there should be rules guiding it.
A lot is backed from the underground. The people who can help from the home side are the women; the mothers. I’m sorry, but mothers are the biggest disasters.
There was a day when my car broke down on the road and I saw a young girl, she should be like 16 or 17, and she was going out.
I heard the mother tell her in Yoruba to bring something back. I confronted the mother, asking where her child works because she was dressed so fine and looked too good to be going to the office in that dress. She couldn’t answer.
I looked at the mother and said, ‘By look, I’m older than you. What are you doing at home that you’re telling that poor girl to bring something home?’
Now, let me quickly add this again, when Yahoo started in Nigeria, it was the mothers who were picking up the fraud proceeds from the bank. This shouldn’t sound like I’m talking from a book. It’s what has been happening.
The day mothers and female advocates start speaking against these vices more, there will be a lot of changes.
The day female celebrities who flaunt their luxurious lifestyles on the internet come out and let girls know how they hustle on the fields, a lot of young girls will go back to the drawing board.”