You can The Doctor Has Big Boobs 2be anyone you want to tell people you are, until you enter the public eye. Then, you might get found out — and one Nelly Yoa is learning the hard way.
In the past week, Australia's media and politicians have whipped up a frenzy on a supposed "African gang crisis" consuming Melbourne.
The issue has flared up in the country, with front page after front page from newspapers demanding action on the matter, and one politician declaring it "out of control." Home Affairs minister Peter Dutton told a radio station that people were "scared to go out to restaurants" because of gangs.
SEE ALSO: Twitter attempts to explain why it won’t ban TrumpWhile there is an overrepresentation of Sudanese-born and Kenyan-born offenders in certain categories comparative to their population in Victoria, the raw data is far from what you'd call a crisis. The biggest offenders are those born in Australia, then New Zealand.
Why you're hearing about it now is likely because Victoria has an election due this year. Politicians from the opposing Liberal party, including Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, have been vocal on the issue, despite criticisms of the issue unfairly targeting Australia's African community.
Someone else who's spoken on the issue is a so-called professional footballer turned media commentator Nelly Yoa, who made appearances as a South Sudanese activist denouncing African gangs.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Yoa also wrote an article on how to tackle the issue of gangs which appeared on the front page of Melbourne newspaper The Age.
In the article, Yoa claimed he "personally knows and mentors members of youth gangs in and out of prison," and that he believes "we have a major issue among young South Sudanese people in Melbourne."
Yoa himself had been allegedly attacked by a gang in 2011, suffering injuries from a machete to his arms and legs.
It seemed Yoa's background was taken on face value. However, not all of it appeared to be true.
So, who is this guy, really?
The South Sudanese Community Association in Victoria's spokesperson Richard Deng, told Fairfax Media he found no person Yoa mentored, nor knew anyone who worked with him.
"He is putting a lie out there that he is trying to help young kids ... He is just trying to help himself," Deng said.
"Melbourne is very small when it comes to this community... how is no one aware of the work he says he is doing?"
In an article Yoa wrote for The Age, he wrote about his "unsuccessful trial in England with Chelsea Football Club and Queens Park Rangers Football," but these claims have been challenged on social media as exaggerated.
Yoa said in a statement on Twitter that indeed he went on trial with both clubs, and criticised "slothful journalists." Yoa also said he would sue for defamation.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Queens Park Rangers told AAP that there were no records of Yoa being at the club. "Certainly no recollection of this and no records either," a QPR spokesperson told AAP.
A tweet from AAP journalist Vince Rugari shows a press release about Yoa's QPR transfer, with "fake links" and attributions to the BBC and Associated Press.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
He also claimed to be linked with various A-League and Asian clubs over the years, and that he made a switch to Australian Rules Football by playing with professional club Collingwood.
Collingwood's president, Eddie McGuire, told the Herald SunYoa had applied "for a position as a category B rookie but was subsequently unsuccessful."
Yoa's article for The Ageis alleged to have been plagiarised from another article by Manola De Vos, who penned one called "6 ways to successfully engage youths in peace building" on Devex.
"I expect Nelly Yoa's piece to be taken down ASAP," De Vos wrote on Twitter.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The article is now prefaced with a disclaimer warning readers about Yoa's disputed background, and that parts of the piece appear to have been plagiarised.
"The Age accepts that Mr Yoa's assertions and credentials should have been checked more thoroughly before publication and apologises for not doing so. The Age also apologises to Ms De Vos. Mr Yoa denies plagiarising Ms De Vos' article," it reads.
On Yoa's Twitter profile he claims to be sponsored by Nike and an ambassador for American Express.
Nike told Fox Sports Australia Yoa had never been sponsored by the company, while American Express told BuzzFeed's Josh Taylor he had never been a brand ambassador for them in Australia, although is checking internationally.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
On a side note, TMZ reported that rappers TY Dollar $ign and YG settled with Yoa to keep an alleged 2015 nightclub assault out of the courts. TMZ didn't hear back from the artists when asked to confirm the settlement.
Mashable has contacted Yoa for comment.
John Akomfrah, On the Verge by Tiana ReidWhy Flyana Boss's "You Wish" should be your song of the summerWhat is an ADHD watch?Best Apple Watch deal: Grab the Apple Watch Series 8 (45mm, GPS) for under $310ChatGPT revealed personal data and verbatim text to researchersMost users on X never see Community Notes correcting misinformationOde to GrayTikTok trend is turning the McDonald's Grimace shake into mini horror filmsJohn Akomfrah, On the Verge by Tiana ReidVictor Wembanyama’s Summer League debut was NBA Twitter’s hype cycle at its silliestBest Amazon device deals: Fire TV sticks, Echo Show bundles, and more devices still on sale postMLB will debut a metaverse stadium for the celebrity AllMost users on X never see Community Notes correcting misinformationThe Truth About AI: A Secular Ghost Story by Zachary Mason'Taskmaster' is getting a Meta Quest VR game spinoffRedux: Spellbinders by The Paris ReviewTo Be At Home Everywhere by Drew BratcherDaddy Issues: Renoir Père and Fils by Cody DelistratyTesla will deliver the first Cybertrucks today. Here's how to watch.Delaney Rowe, TikTok's favorite Female Lead, talks cringe comedy, loneliness, and rom coms NYT's The Mini crossword answers for January 11 A Message from the Board of Directors by The Paris Review CES 2024: This wacky Lenovo laptop lets you attach a tablet to the lid CES 2024: This laptop's weird touchpad is for YouTube What Our Contributors Are Reading and Watching This Winter by The Paris Review Takako Wanted Snow by Jana Larson How to pre My Gender Is Masha Gessen OpenAI launches its own GPT Store The Deep Corner by Edward Hirsch Best Black Friday mattress deal: Save up to 50% on Nectar CES 2024: Hands CES 2024: Evolve MVMT wearable wants to save your feet Bitcoin ETFs have actually been granted SEC approval now Best electric toothbrush deal: Up to 41% off Philips Sonicare at Amazon Reading the Artifacts After the Capitol Riot by Swati Rana On Sports Time by Matt Levin Someone Else’s Diary by Maria Stepanova Home by Nadia Owusu The Resistance
1.5627s , 8230.40625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Doctor Has Big Boobs 2】,Creation Information Network