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Zimbabwe News and Internet Radio

Congolese singer Koffi Olomide caught ‘kicking woman’ in Kenya

Koffi Olomide, one of Africa’s most popular singers, has been caught on camera purportedly kicking a woman at the main airport in Kenya.

Koffi Olomide Kicks Female Dancer in Nairobi
Koffi Olomide Kicks Female Dancer in Nairobi

Police are seen intervening to stop the attack on the woman, identified by Kenyan media as one of his dancers.

Members of the 60-year-old rumba star’s entourage are quoted as saying that he has apologised to her.

The musician later shared a video on his Facebook page in which he appears with the dancer he was supposed to have attacked.

He says that he didn’t kick the dancer and she confirms this in the video.

He has also said that he was defending his dancers from an aggressor.

In 2012, Olomide was convicted in the Democratic Republic of Congo, his home country, of assaulting his producer.

The court gave the singer a three-month suspended prison sentence.

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The altercation with his producer, Diego Lubaki, was over a debt of about $3,700 (£2,800), the court heard.

In 2008, he was accused of a kicking cameraman from DR Congo’s private RTGA television station and breaking his camera at a concert in the capital, Kinshasa, following disagreement over recording rights.

In the end, the speaker of national assembly stepped in to resolve the dispute, brokering a reconciliation between the star and owner of TV station.

News of the latest incident is trending on Twitter in East Africa under #KofiOlomidi, with some people calling for the musician to be arrested, charged and deported.

He is due to perform at a concert in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, on Saturday.

Kenya’s privately owned KTN television station quoted witnesses as saying that he assaulted the dancer after she had been involved in an altercation with his wife.

It showed footage of a man calming Mr Olomide down, who then goes, flanked by his entourage, to his vehicle.

Before he jumps into it, he jokingly shows his fists to a television crew and remarks in the Lingala language, “Take a photo of me”, which is a lyric in his song about selfies.

Referring to the assault, Mr Olomide said: “The girls are excited. They fight…”

Like other Congolese musicians, he is known for his extravagant lifestyle and flashy outfits.

The music he plays is known as “soukous”, which comes from the French word secouer, meaning to shake, and its dancers are renowned for their erotic moves.

The raunchy performances of some of his songs have been banned in some countries. BBC

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