The battle between Kcee and Harrysong, which many people assumed was
over, has been reignited. Kcee has filed a lawsuit against Harrysong and
their former manager Soso Soberekon, who announced his exit from 5 Star
Music Label in June 2017.
If you recall, back in February, we revealed that Five Star Music
arrested Harrysong along with his new Alterplate manager, Desmond Ike on
criminal charges involving fraud, forgery and impersonation.
The matter was however settled out of court when Daddy Showkey
intervened. In May, Harrysong confirmed to the press that he is no
longer contractually obligated to Five Star Music and this was a
decision supported by the label chairman, E-Money and Kcee.
Hence he was free to now relaunch his label, Alterplate. Although
details are still sketchy, Kcee has now dragged both Harrysong and Soso
to court and they all seem ready for war!
Michael Phelps produced a vintage performance to claim an astonishing 19th Olympic gold medal of his career on Sunday. The 31-year-old, who quit the sport after the 2012 Games, was back with a bang in Rio as Team USA eased to victory in the 4x100 meters freestyle relay. Phelps, who produced a stunning second leg, has now won 23 medals in total, extending his record as the most decorated Olympian of all time. With son Boomer in attendance, Phelps did his kid proud, along with teammates Caleb Dressel, Ryan Held and Nathan Adrian. It was the second gold of the night for the U.S. after Katie Ledecky produced an astonishing performance to win gold in the 400m freestyle. The 19-year-old smashed her own world record to win in a time of 3:56.46 -- nearly five seconds ahead of her closest rival. Ledecky's previous best in the 400m was in August 2014, when she came home in 3:58.37 at the Pan Pacific Championships. But she tore that time to pieces to finish ahe
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Japan's Prime Minister and leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Shinzo Abe attends a news conference following a victory in the upper house elections by his ruling coalition, at the LDP headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, July 11, 2016. Japan's primary budget deficit is expected to be around 5.5 trillion yen ($51.77 billion) in fiscal 2020, improving from a 6.5 trillion yen deficit earlier projected but still missing the goal of a surplus, government sources who have seen the figures said on Monday. The primary budget deficit is expected to narrow partly because of the sluggish inflation outlook, with lower prices helping suppress government spending, said one of the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The forecast is also based on the assumption economic growth would pick up, the source said. Japan's government cut its forecasts for consumer prices earlier this month, saying it expected them to rise 1.4 percent for fiscal 2017, well bel
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