|
July 9, 2014
|
||||
|
Star Features |
|||||
|
|
|||||
SELECTOR UNSURE CHILD IS HIS - Wants DNA test to be done |
|||||
|
André Williams, STAR Writer
Twenty-two-year-old sound system selector Miguel Black is eager to have a paternity matter resolved as it involves the mother of his child. His 25-year-old former lover, Monique Dillon, who is currently unemployed, is equally confused regarding the 10-month-old child in question. To make matters worse, Black told THE STAR that his friend recently did a paternity test and found out that one of three kids did not belong to him. According to Black, "Mi a fret cause mi nuh want weh reach mi friend reach me." Although they also have a four-year-old daughter, the two appear bitter towards each other regarding this child and the DNA saga. After having spent six years of their lives together, the couple claims that it is no longer an item. When asked what they wanted the results to be: Black said: "Mi want it to be positive: mi like the youth and mi tek best care of him." Dillon said: "I want the result to say a his child because him woulda put us up back and him get a chance to take care of his children ... Right now a floor we sleep on a people place." THE STAR asked the two what will be likely outcome if the result goes either way. Black said: "If a my child mi haffi accept it and take care of it and den make people know say a mine. If is not my child, mi haffi jus call it a day, mi nuh want fi haffi ina no war or argument with her." Dillon said: "If the baby is Miguel's then him woulda alright, but if a nuh his own, we suffer for the rest of we life." THE STAR was told that the child in question is registered in Black's name, but both adults expressed that they have some doubts. Dillon said: "Him have doubt and me have a little doubt, but I don't know where to start." Black said: "The youth weh she did a stay wid, his mother come a my yard and a mek up noise say a fi har grand and say a she a tek care of him and she buy pampers. She (Dillon), mi hear say call di people dem and say she ago want her baby father so mi nuh know. Dats why mi need proof fi show people cause dem a talk a baga tings." The matter involves two communities because after Black had put her out following a dispute, she went to another community nearby, where someone took her in. Black said: "The youth live where mi other family dem come from, so a bare talk. The whole a Kingston know wah gwan ... everywhere mi go, somebody have supm fi say, and memba me a selector enuh..." Dillon: "Him eva a cuss and gwan bad and mek up noise so dem know wah gwan." Both were then asked by THE STAR, who the child looks like; Black said: "Sir mi nah tell nuh lie enuh, him head favour the youth own. Mi nuh see nothing weh him have for me, unlike my daughter, so that why mi need the DNA." Dillon said: "The child look like him or maybe mi confuse." |
|||||
Home | Gleaner Blogs | Gleaner Online | Go-Jamaica | Go-Local | Feedback | Disclaimer | Advertisement | Privacy Policy | Contact Us |
|||||