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Celebrities who battled body shaming

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In the entertainment space, fame often arrives with a darker companion: online bullying. From actresses to musicians and reality-TV stars, social media has become a brutal arena where women’s bodies are mocked, dissected and policed. Yet, many of these targets have refused to stay silent, choosing instead to reclaim their narratives. Faith Ajayi highlights entertainers who have pushed back against body-shaming and the digital cruelty that comes with stardom

Nkechi Blessing

Actress Nkechi Blessing has never shied away from controversy, but in September 2025, she found herself at the centre of a storm she never anticipated. While taking a break during a routine gym session at an iFitness branch in Lagos, an unflattering photo of her midsection was taken without her knowledge and posted online.

The image triggered harsh mockery from social media users and even a colleague, Blessing CEO, who revisited their past feud in a video.

She said, “Nkechi Blessing, I am shocked you are angry that people are body-shaming you.”

She continued, “Even though we reconciled at JP 2025’s wedding, I remember how you body-shamed me… You told the world you had my nude videos… You went live and showed those videos I sent you in confidence.”

Verydarkman also weighed in, playing an old clip of Blessing promoting a weight-loss product while questioning her claims about body transformation.

Blessing initially responded with humour, writing on Instagram, “I went to the gym to stay fit and healthy, not for a fashion show or runway. With my big belle with pride, una go dey alright!”

But in December 2025, during an appearance on The Honest Bunch podcast, she broke down while discussing the emotional strain. “This is who I am. I wear clothes that make me comfortable. You get BBL and troll me with a natural body?” She added that she tracked down the person who took the photo and had her arrested for privacy invasion and defamation.

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Turning the experience into advocacy, Blessing launched the “Big Belle Challenge,” encouraging women to post unfiltered photos. “I don’t like stress. Instead of fighting online, I handled it privately,” she said.

Uriel

Former Big Brother Naija star, actress and entrepreneur, Uriel Oputa, has consistently challenged Nigeria’s rigid beauty standards. One of her major encounters with body-shaming occurred in 2017 during the BBNaija show, when viewers mocked her breasts and questioned her age. She fired back with confidence: “Proud of what God gave me. If my boobs offend you, look away.”

The attacks resurfaced in 2024 after a photo of her at a Lagos party circulated online. Trolls revived conversations about her body, while some made derogatory remarks about her being mixed-race. Uriel later described those comments as “ignorance wrapped in insecurity.”

Uriel

She pushed back again, posting a bold lingerie video with the caption:

“My body, my rules. My breasts don’t sag for your approval; that’s your insecurity talking.

Do women body-shame other women? Mehn, we’re our own worst enemies.”

Uriel later turned the backlash into an empowerment movement through her Boob Freedom campaign, partnering with lingerie brands to promote natural bodies of all shapes.

“I once lost weight, and they said my boobs got worse. Now? I’m embracing the sag. It’s premium content,” she joked.

Rapper Ruggedman has been one of her biggest supporters, openly celebrating her physique and shutting down trolls whenever they resurface.

DJ Cuppy

Florence Otedola, popularly known as DJ Cuppy, has often found herself the target of colourist and body-shaming attacks despite her global acclaim. After sharing swimsuit photos from her father’s 60th birthday yacht celebration in 2022, trolls criticised her skin tone and mocked her body, with comments such as “too dark and uneven” and “preggy vibes.”

Cuppy responded firmly on social media: “My skin’s my superpower — dark, bold, unapologetic.” She questioned Nigeria’s selective celebration of beauty, asking, “Black excellence, but only if it’s lightened?”

Her fans amplified her message through #CuppyMelaninMagic, which she supported with donations to anti-colourism and skin-positivity organisations across West Africa.

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By 2025, Cuppy had turned the incident into fuel for her expanding global brand, performing at international DJ sets, collaborating with top artistes and leaning fully into her identity without apology.

Ayra Starr

Since her breakout in 2021, Ayra Starr has faced intense scrutiny over her fashion choices. At just 18, she was criticised for wearing skimpy clothes, but the backlash intensified after her performance at a Meta concert on October 11, 2022.

Trolls accused her of being “immoral,” while some commentators blamed her label boss, Don Jazzy. But the young star refused to bend. The next day, she went live wearing an even shorter skirt, declaring, “My skirt is short because I’m hot, literally and figuratively. If my legs disturb you, close your eyes when you stream my music.”

She doubled down with the release of Rush, whose lyrics underscored her message of self-assurance.

This year, she followed up with another confidence anthem, Hot Body, reaffirming her stance on self-expression. Today, Ayra Starr performs globally on her own terms, and even her critics queue to take photos with her.

Etinosa Idemudia

Actress Etinosa Idemudia has been open about her struggles with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, but after giving birth in December 2020, she became the focus of harsh comments about her postpartum body.

In an Instagram video, Idemudia confronted the insults directly. Lifting her dress, she rubbed her stomach and said, “This is my Christabel tummy! I carried emotions, stress and love. If you don’t have a belly, sorry for your flat life.”

The body-shaming continued for years.

In a 2025 interview with PUNCH, she admitted the constant attacks wore her down. “I have been constantly bullied and mocked for my stomach. It affected me… My fat is largely caused by PCOS, but many people don’t know,” she said.

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After medical consultations, she opted for cosmetic surgery, framing it as an act of self-care rather than defeat. “Science exists to make life easier… As an actor, looks and skill go hand in hand,” she said.

Moyo Lawal

Moyo Lawal has always been vocal about her body confidence, but her most difficult battle came in 2023 when an ex-partner leaked an intimate video of her. The clip spread rapidly across social media and messaging platforms, triggering intense slut-shaming and online harassment.

Lawal initially responded candidly: “Yes, I make love. I’m single, not a nun. Stop acting brand new.” But the situation escalated when strangers attempted to locate her home, turning body-shaming into life-threatening bullying.

In an emotional live session on September 18, 2023, she said, “You watched, you judged, you shared. That was rape by distribution.” She reported the matter to the police and pursued legal action against those circulating the video.

The trauma pushed her into a year-long break from Nollywood. In early 2024, she admitted, “People think bullying is just comments. It’s violence. It almost pushed me into depression.”

Lawal returned in late 2024 with Curvy Queens, a film celebrating body acceptance, which became a streaming hit and marked a triumphant comeback.

Her battles continued into 2025 when trolls mocked her weight. She responded on X: “If I do surgery, I will tell you. If I don’t, I will still tell you. My body is not your national project.” To another critic, she wrote, “Curves don’t expire. Mind your mileage.”

Now an advocate for digital rights and consent awareness, Lawal has turned her experience into a platform for education, proving that resilience can coexist with vulnerability.

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53,000 dead, 50m sick yearly from unsafe food — FG

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The Federal Government on Monday raised fresh concerns over the growing burden of foodborne diseases in Nigeria, revealing that unsafe food causes more than 53,000 deaths and nearly 50 million illnesses annually across the country.

Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Iziaq Salako, disclosed this in Abuja during a ministerial press briefing to commemorate the 2026 World Food Safety Day, themed “From Burden to Solutions – Safe Food Everywhere.”

Salako described food safety as a critical national development and health security issue, warning that the true cost of unsafe food extended beyond sickness and death to the loss of human capital, particularly among children.

According to him, Nigeria loses an estimated 4.26 million years of healthy life annually to foodborne diseases through illness, disability and premature death.

“Nigeria records nearly 50 million foodborne illnesses every year, and unsafe food causes more than 53,000 deaths annually in our country.

“Together, these illnesses and deaths result in a staggering 4.26 million years of healthy life lost to illness, disability or early death,” the minister said.

He noted that children under five account for more than 80 per cent of the country’s foodborne disease burden.

“Most of this burden falls heavily on children under five, who account for more than 80 per cent of all foodborne disease burden in Nigeria.

“The true cost of unsafe food in Nigeria is not only measured in sickness and death, but also in the lost cognitive, physical and developmental potential of our children,” Salako added.

The minister’s remarks came on the heels of newly released estimates by the World Health Organisation showing that unsafe food causes about 866 million illnesses and 1.5 million deaths globally each year, with Africa bearing the highest per-capita burden.

According to Salako, diarrhoeal diseases remained the leading cause of foodborne illnesses in Nigeria, with more than 40 million cases linked to pathogens such as Salmonella, Escherichia coli, Campylobacter, Shigella and rotavirus.

“Over 40 million diarrhoeal illnesses in Nigeria are linked to foodborne pathogens. These infections continue to be a major cause of hospitalisation, malnutrition and mortality among our youngest citizens,” he said.

He also warned of increasing exposure to chemical contaminants.

“Chemical hazards are also emerging as a serious concern, with lead exposure responsible for tens of thousands of healthy lives lost through contaminated grains, spices and water sources. These numbers underscore the urgency of strengthening food safety systems across the entire value chain,” he stated.

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Despite the challenges, Salako said Nigeria had made notable progress in building a stronger food safety system.

He said the country’s 2023 Joint External Evaluation recorded measurable improvements across all food safety indicators, while Nigeria’s 2025 State Party Annual Report score surpassed the World Health Organisation target for low- and middle-income countries.

“Nigeria is now one of the leading countries in the region in establishing functional systems for detecting, reporting and responding to foodborne disease events,” he said.

The minister, however, stressed that the latest figures should serve as a wake-up call.

“The new WHO estimates are a call to action. We must intensify surveillance for heavy metals and chemical contaminants. We must improve food safety practices in traditional and informal markets where most Nigerians buy their food.

“We must strengthen hygiene, water and sanitation infrastructure and ensure food business operators comply with national standards,” he said.

Salako also linked food safety to the country’s growing burden of non-communicable diseases, including hypertension, stroke, diabetes and obesity.

“Food safety is not only about preventing infections; it is also about ensuring that the food we eat does not contribute to the growing burden of non-communicable diseases,” he said.

He disclosed that Nigeria had developed National Guidelines for Sodium Reduction, while the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control had finalised draft sodium reduction regulations aimed at reducing salt levels in processed foods.

According to him, the country was also implementing industrial trans-fat elimination regulations and strengthening efforts to improve the sugar-sweetened beverage tax and front-of-pack food labelling systems to encourage healthier food choices.

Salako urged food manufacturers, regulators, researchers and consumers to support efforts aimed at ensuring safer and healthier food for Nigerians.

“Food safety is everyone’s business. It saves lives, strengthens our economy and protects our children. These numbers show that food safety is not optional; it is a national health security priority,” he said.

The Director-General of NAFDAC, Prof Mojisola Adeyeye, said strengthening food safety systems remained critical to reducing the country’s burden of foodborne diseases.

Represented at the event by the Director of Food Safety and Applied Nutrition Directorate, Eva Edwards, Adeyeye described food safety as a public health, socioeconomic and development imperative.

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“The theme for the 2026 World Food Safety Day, ‘From Burden to Solutions – Safe Food Everywhere,’ reminds us that food safety is not merely a technical issue; it is a public health, socioeconomic and development imperative. Behind every statistic on foodborne disease is a child, a family, a community or a business affected by preventable illness and loss,” she said.

The NAFDAC boss said the agency remained committed to reducing foodborne diseases through stronger regulation, surveillance and stakeholder engagement.

“At NAFDAC, we remain firmly committed to contributing to reducing the burden of foodborne disease through science-based regulation, effective surveillance, strengthened food control systems and robust stakeholder engagement,” she said.

She added, “Our efforts continue to focus on ensuring that foods manufactured, imported, exported, distributed, advertised, sold and consumed in Nigeria meet acceptable standards of safety and quality.”

Adeyeye stressed that safe food was central to achieving the country’s nutrition and health goals.

“We recognise World Food Safety Day as an added opportunity to situate food safety as a significant issue of public health concern, especially in the light of safe, wholesome food being important for boosting immunity and improving the body’s natural defence in fighting diseases.

“Where food is unsafe, our nutritional goals cannot be achieved,” she said.

The NAFDAC Director-General further noted that addressing food safety challenges would require stronger collaboration among government agencies, industry players, researchers, development partners and consumers.

“The challenge before us is significant, but so too is our collective capacity to address it through evidence-based policies, effective regulation, responsible industry practices and sustained public awareness,” she said.

Adeyeye reaffirmed the agency’s commitment to strengthening food safety systems nationwide.

“At NAFDAC, we remain resolute in our unwavering commitment to playing our role in strengthening the national food safety system, upholding standards and regulations, and promoting best practices within industry and across society to assure a safe food supply,” Adeyeye said.

Meanwhile, the Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa called for stronger regulatory measures to address the growing burden of diet-related diseases in Nigeria.

In a statement issued on Monday to commemorate the 2026 World Food Safety Day, CAPPA warned that millions of Nigerians were increasingly exposed to health risks associated with excessive consumption of sugar, salt, unhealthy fats and ultra-processed foods.

The organisation argued that food safety should extend beyond concerns about contamination and foodborne diseases to include protection against products that contribute to non-communicable diseases.

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CAPPA Executive Director, Oluwafemi Akinbode, said, “Food safety is not only about preventing food poisoning. It is also about ensuring that the foods and drinks available to Nigerians do not slowly undermine their health and well-being.”

He warned that weak regulatory safeguards and aggressive marketing of unhealthy products were contributing to rising cases of hypertension, diabetes, obesity, stroke, kidney disease and certain cancers.

According to him, diet-related diseases were placing a growing burden on families, the healthcare system and the economy.

“Public health policies must be guided by science and the public interest, not by industries whose profitability depends on unhealthy consumption patterns,” Akinbode stated.

CAPPA welcomed the recent passage by the Senate of a bill seeking to strengthen Nigeria’s Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Tax regime, describing it as a critical intervention in efforts to reduce excessive sugar consumption and curb non-communicable diseases.

The organisation also urged the Federal Government to adopt national sodium reduction targets, implement Front-of-Pack Warning Labelling on packaged foods and beverages, and strengthen restrictions on the marketing of unhealthy foods to children.

“Truly, safe food should not only be free from contamination but should also protect consumers from preventable diseases and support long-term wellbeing,” he added.

World Food Safety Day is observed annually to raise awareness and inspire action to prevent, detect and manage food-related risks. The 2026 edition marks the eighth global observance of the event.

While food safety discussions have traditionally focused on microbial contamination and foodborne disease outbreaks, public health experts are increasingly drawing attention to the role of unhealthy diets in driving non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular diseases and certain cancers.

In Nigeria, authorities have intensified efforts to strengthen food safety governance through the National Food Safety Management Committee, the National Integrated Guidelines for Foodborne Disease Surveillance and Response, sodium reduction initiatives, industrial trans-fat elimination regulations and improved food surveillance systems.

However, health advocates continue to push for stronger nutrition-focused policies, including enhanced sugar-sweetened beverage taxes, front-of-pack warning labels and tighter restrictions on the marketing of unhealthy foods to children.

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PHOTOS: William Kumuyi Celebrates His 85th Birthday Today

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Birthday: William Kumuyi Turns 85 Today!

Happy 85th birthday to Deeper Life Pastor, William Kumuyi.

We thank God for your life of unwavering dedication to Christ, sound biblical teaching, and faithful leadership.

Your impact on countless lives across generations remains a testimony to God’s grace and faithfulness.

May the Lord continue to strengthen you, grant you good health, renewed vigor, and greater fruitfulness in His service.

Wishing you a joyful and blessed birthday celebration.

Happy Birthday, Sir!

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How rescued orphaned elephant highlights Nigeria’s conservation fight

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As dawn breaks over Okomu National Park in Ovia South-West Local Government Area of Edo State, an exhausted wildlife caretaker prepares milk formula for Agbaibor, a month-old orphaned forest elephant rescued after wandering out of the rainforest alone.

“The baby elephant has to take two litres of this per meal,” said Joshua Aribasoye, one of those responsible for feeding and monitoring the calf around the clock in a makeshift pen at a ranger outpost inside the park in southern Edo.

Forest elephants, smaller and more elusive than their savannah cousins, are endangered and their population has collapsed in recent decades largely because of habitat loss and poaching.

Agbaibor—named after the ranger who helped rescue him—was found near a palm oil plantation bordering the protected forest late last year after being separated from the herd.

Rangers and conservationists tried to reunite the calf with its family by taking it back into the forest, but it soon wandered out again.

Fearing it would die alone or be attacked, park authorities and conservation group African Nature Investors (ANI) launched an emergency effort to nurse the animal, flying in elephant rehabilitation specialists from Zambia and assigning caretakers to raise him.

It has become a costly operation. ANI spends between four and five million naira (about 3,600) a month on his care, including 77 kilograms of milk powder, alongside oats and nutritional supplements.

Conservationists expect the rehabilitation process to take another three to five years. They are building a new enclosure deeper inside the park, within elephant habitat, where the calf will gradually be exposed to the sounds and movements of wild herds before an eventual reintroduction.

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“The calf will be cared for there… until it is integrated into a group,” said ANI project manager Peter Abanyam.

200 remain

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists forest elephants as critically endangered, with conservationists estimating only around 200 remain in the country.

Roughly 40 are believed to live in and around Okomu—one of Nigeria’s last remaining rainforest ecosystems, covering about 24,000 hectares.

“Okomu is critical for conservation in Nigeria,” said Abanyam.

“In a small ecosystem like this, housing 40 elephants is a huge number, and it needs to be protected at all costs.”

But pressure on the forest is intensifying.

Logging, poaching, farming and expanding human settlements have fragmented large parts of the reserve, shrinking elephant corridors and increasing contact between wildlife and nearby communities.

Godstime Christopher, 26, once helped transport illegally logged timber out of the forest before being recruited as a ranger by ANI.

Today, he works with the organisation’s biomonitoring team, using camera traps to track elephant movements and identify poachers.

“When I became a ranger, I thought I would use that to exploit logging,” he admitted. “But the training changed our mentality.”

‘Preserve what we have’

Conservation groups say engaging local communities is essential if endangered wildlife is to survive in one of Africa’s fastest-growing countries, where economic hardship often drives people deeper into protected forests in search of land, timber or bushmeat.

While the ranger programme appears to have helped drive down poaching in the area, hunting for other species still disturbs the elephants and degrades their habitat, Christopher warned.

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Back at the rehabilitation centre, Agbaibor splashes in the mud, nudges his handler for attention and drinks from oversized bottles of milk formula.

For Aribasoye, the demanding work has become deeply personal.

“We are supposed to be like a mother to him,” he said.

“Seeing him eating and playing is part of the joy… because I know we are working to preserve what we have left.”

AFP

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