News
Ibu’s son accuses step mother Stella of selling all late actor’s properties worth N147m
One of the children of John Okafor, popularity known as Mr. Ibu, has spoken out against the injustice being meted out to him and other children of the Nollywood actor by his wife Stella.
The young man who identified himself as Somtochukeu Ibu, said the late actor had many children from different women. He said the children are now struggling to make ends meet after one of his wives, Stella sold all his properties and even converted donations made during his I’ll health and burial to herself.
Somtochukeu stated this while reacting to social post by Stella in which she was seen soliciting for financial support from the public.
The young man said Stella had no reason to seek support or donation in view of the fact that she raked in N88m from sale of the late actor’s properties in Lagos, Enugu and Asaba as well as seized N60m donated to the family by the public.
He said of all the money made from the entire transactions, Stella gave him only N10M,000 which she claimed was a gift before he found out she had sold out all his properties worth millions of naia.
He said-“public support abandoned and struggling in life while Stella had sold all the actor’s properties and
“My name is okafor Somotochukwu, the 3rd son of John Okafor Mr Ibu and 4th child of Mr Ibu.
I came across a video this morning of my Step mother asking for financial assistance online, claiming her children are the only children my father had.
That is not true, Mr Ibu my father had many children, some older than me and some younger than me.
I decided to speak out because this narrative has become an insult to the rest of my father’s children and family.
When my father passed away, he left behind properties and assets meant for all his children. However, my stepmother (Stella) took control of everything for herself and her own children.
She sold my father’s house in Lagos for ₦60 million and did not reach out to any of his other children.
When I asked her for financial help from her, she ignored my messages and calls.
She also sold his house in Enugu for about ₦17 million, yet only sent me ₦40,000, saying she was merely giving it to me as a gift.
Later, I learned the property had been sold for millions.
She also sold another property in Asaba for ₦11 million without giving me anything.
There was also money in the bank and funds about N60 million that Nigerians contributed when my father was ill.
What hurts me most is that after keeping all these assets for herself and her children, she is now publicly presenting herself as the victim. Meanwhile, I struggled financially to the point that I could not even clear my school fees and access my WAEC.
I am speaking out because I want people to hear my side of the story. I believe my father would not be happy if I remained silent while these issues continues like this.
Thank you, and God bless everyone.”
News
Lady identifies bandits that abducted her, leading to their arrested wth N11m recovered
Three bandits have been arrested in Benue state after a lady who they had kidnapped and released, identified them at a motor park and raised alarm.
The k!kidnappers came to Ihotu park to board a vehicle to Makurdi and were met by the lady they had earlier kidnapped and released after collecting ransom from her relatives.
They were even using a bag they collected from the girl. The girl raised the alarm, held one inside the vehicle, and two took to their heels, but were caught.
They had a ghana-must-go bag at the back of the vehicle. N11m was found inside the bag.
Following the confirmation of their identity by another lady who was also their victim, mob gathered around with the intent to beat them up and possibly set them ablaze.
But the park manager decided to invite the police and soldiers who rescued them and took them to their station.
It was later gathered that the Benue state Governor, Rev. Father Hyacinth Alia called and said he was interested in the case which made the police to take the apprehended bandits to Makurdi, the state capital.
News
Tinubu’s govt ignores IMF, draws additional loan of $2.5b from UAE
President Bola Tinubu Federal Government has drawn down $1.5bn from a $5bn financing facility arranged with the United Arab Emirates’ largest lender, First Abu Dhabi Bank, despite growing concerns from global financial institutions over the increasing use of complex derivative financing by African sovereigns.
Bloomberg reported on Friday that the latest drawdown represents the first tranche of a $5bn Total Return Swap facility approved by the National Assembly on March 31, 2026, and is expected to support the 2026 budget, finance infrastructure projects, and refinance existing debt obligations.
The report quoted people familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media.
The report read, “Nigeria has accessed the first tranche of a $5bn derivatives deal with the United Arab Emirates’ largest lender, pressing ahead with a transaction that has been scrutinised for being opaque.
“The West African nation drew about $1.5bn in the last couple of weeks from a total return swap transaction with First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC, according to people familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media.”
The transaction comes at a time when Nigeria is facing higher borrowing costs in international capital markets, forcing the government to seek alternative financing arrangements to shore up its fiscal position and improve access to foreign exchange liquidity.
Under the arrangement, Nigeria is required to pledge Federal Government securities worth about 133 per cent of any amount drawn under the facility. This means that for the full $5bn facility, the government would have to post approximately $6.65bn worth of naira-denominated bonds as collateral.
In return, the Abu Dhabi-based lender provides dollar liquidity to the Nigerian government. The Federal Government will pay a floating interest rate benchmark plus about four percentage points, while the lender receives the returns generated by the underlying government securities.
The transaction effectively allows Nigeria to unlock immediate dollar funding without issuing new Eurobonds or taking on traditional external loans at prevailing market rates, which have become increasingly expensive for frontier economies.
The government has already indicated that the proceeds from the initial $1.5bn drawdown will be deployed to support budget implementation, fund critical infrastructure projects, and refinance costlier domestic and external debts.
However, the financing arrangement has attracted criticism from international financial institutions and market analysts over concerns about transparency and potential hidden liabilities.
In its June 2026 assessment of African sovereign debt markets, the International Monetary Fund warned that derivative financing structures such as total return swaps are often opaque and difficult for investors and creditors to monitor.
The IMF noted that such arrangements are “hard to track, hard to value in real time, and can obscure the true extent of a country’s financial obligations.”
Three days ago, Fitch Ratings warned that Nigeria’s planned $5bn financing arrangement with First Abu Dhabi Bank could increase sovereign debt risks and reduce transparency in public debt reporting.
News
700 Nigerians stranded in South Africa as June 30 deadline looms
At least 700 Nigerians remain stranded in South Africa three days before the June 30 deadline issued by anti-immigration groups.
It was gathered that despite President Bola Tinubu’s approval of funds for their evacuation, bureaucratic delays have prevented the release of the money, leaving hundreds stranded amid escalating xenophobic tensions.
Although the president approved funding for four additional rescue flights after the first evacuation brought home 258 Nigerians, the money had yet to reach the designated carrier, Air Peace.
This delay, according to officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission and the Nigeria High Commission in South Africa, is stalling the evacuation operation and leaving hundreds of Nigerians exposed to attacks.
The delay has heightened fears among the stranded Nigerians as xenophobic tensions continue to escalate across South Africa.
The President of the Nigerian Citizens Association in South Africa, Rev. Frank Onyekwelu has said over 20 Nigerians had died since the renewed wave of anti-foreigner attacks, while many others had been assaulted, displaced or forced to abandon their businesses.
According to the officials, over 1,000 Nigerians registered with the federal government for evacuation. However, only 324 have been successfully brought home so far through a combination of government efforts and private intervention, leaving more than 700 Nigerians at risk of attacks and exposed to the elements.
The first batch of returnees (258) arrived in Lagos on June 11 aboard Air Peace, while the second batch (66) arrived on June 24 aboard ValueJet.
-
News1 year agoSenate to speed up conclusion of Nigeria Forest Security Service Bill
-
News11 months agoThe Many Lies Against Bashir Haske
-
News3 years agoBreaking: Tinubu’s authentic ministerial nominees
-
News3 years ago“Anytime we want to kill terrorists, President would ask us to take permission from France but they were killing our soldiers-” Niger Republic coup leader
-
News3 years ago“I’m leaving the Catholic church because Bishop Onah is oppressing me,” says Okunerere
-
News3 years agoRadio Nigeria’s veteran broadcaster Kelvin Ugwu dies three months after retirement from service
-
News3 years agoDokpesi and the Gazebo Mystique
-
News3 years agoTsunami: Tinubu orders dissolution of managements, boards of MDAs, to sack all Buhari’s political appointees
