Controversial Love Island star reveals she’s secretly become a mum
secret mum
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CONTROVERSIAL Love Island star Liana Isadora Van-Riel has welcomed her first child after she quit her stripping job.
The former reality star entered the ITV2 dating show as a late arrival back in 2016.
tiktok/@lianaisadora1Liana Isadora Van Riel has welcomed her first child[/caption]
WENNThe former reality star appeared on the 2016 series of Love Island[/caption]
WENNShe was coupled with Adam Maxted on the reality show – but her time was cut short[/caption]
Liana, now 29, often shared updates on motherhood after she gave birth to a little girl last year.
In one sweet clip, Liana was seen affectionately playing with her baby by helping the tot to balance.
She captioned it: “No revenge because I’m a mum and don’t have the time or energy.”
In another video she cradled her daughter close to her and wrote: “Imagine hating on me and I’m just here minding my own business living my best life with my baby everyday.”
Liana was a stripper before going into the villa but has since quit her former job.
It is not clear if Liana is in a relationship, but just days ago she shared a post which read: “To any girls dating a guy who has a baby under one. RUN.
“I promise you if he can leave the mother of his child at the most vulnerable time of her life, he can do so much worse to you.
“And if she left him, even worse cause NO woman would choose to do that first year postpartum alone unless there’s a seriously good reason to not have that man around.”
She added: “The BIGGEST red flag.”
Four clues All Stars’ Arabella and Adam had secretly split after Love Island villa
The end of Adam and Arabella
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Liana was coupled up with Adam Maxted on the show but they were separated when they were voted, by the rest of the contestants, as one of the weakest couples.
Liana and Tom Powell then received the fewest votes from the public and left the island.
Liana revealed some of the things fans don’t see on the show.
She told The Sun: “You’re completely cut off.”
“They give you these basic little phones where you can text each other but nobody really uses them, they’re only really there for the whole ‘I’ve got a text’ aspect.”
A crown over a soccer ball. An eyeball that “looked cool.” Flowers.
Those are some of the everyday tattoos that defense lawyers say helped lead to the sudden weekend deportation of roughly 200 Venezuelan men who are accused of being members of the ruthless gang Tren de Aragua.
President Donald Trump ordered the men removed from the U.S. and sent to a notorious El Salvadoran prison under an 18th century wartime law that allows noncitizens to be deported without due process.
The proclamation issued by Trump argued that the wartime law applied because the gang is “perpetrating an invasion” of the United States.
Most lawyers have dismissed that argument and noted that the government has not produced evidence to prove the men are gang members. The men were flown out of the country before they could meet with their attorneys.
Tattoos are signals of membership in some Latin American gangs, with the facial tattoos of the El Salvadoran group MS-13 perhaps the best known. Experts, though, say tattoos are not central to Tren de Aragua. They also note that tattoos, hugely popular all over the world, are often nothing more than body art.
U.S. officials have said agents did not rely on “tattoos alone” to identify gang members before the weekend flights. But lawyers and family members say tattoos were repeatedly used to argue that the men belonged to Tren de Aragua.
Take Jerce Reyes Barrios, 36, whose defense lawyer said in a sworn declaration that authorities identified him as a gang member in part because of a tattoo of a crown over a soccer ball and the word “Dios,” or God.
Reyes Barrios, though, had been a professional soccer player and he chose that tattoo because the crown looked like the logo of his favorite team, the Spanish soccer club Real Madrid, his lawyer, Linette Tobin said in the filing.
She included a photo of the tattoo in the filing.
The crown looks very similar to the Real Madrid logo.