A Nigerian lady, Yetunde Omobolanle, has shared her thoughts on the ongoing rumours surrounding Regina Daniels’ marriage, describing the entire situation as laughable. The speculation about trouble in Regina’s marriage began after reports emerged alleging that her billionaire husband, Ned Nwoko, had allegedly impregnated another actress, a claim that was later debunked. However, the rumours gained further traction when Nwoko was spotted in public with his Moroccan wife, Laila. Social media users also noticed that Regina Daniels removed her husband’s name from her Instagram bio and deleted several photos of the couple from her page after returning to the platform.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), @Divayetty1 expressed that she felt no sympathy for Regina amid the controversy. She emphasized that the situation was quite laughable, and she didn’t understand why Regina was caught up in such a mess in the first place. According to Yetunde, it wasn’t about passing judgment but rather about the deeper issue of Nigerian women often not thinking carefully when making life-changing decisions.
Why I don’t pity Regina Daniels
“I’m sorry, but this Regina Daniels situation is just so laughable to me, borderline clownish—because, in the first place, she had zero reason being in this mess. This isn’t about judgment, but I genuinely feel like Nigerian women don’t think deeply enough when making life-changing decisions. When Regina married Ned, people kept screaming “She won!” and I just kept asking, won what exactly? Look at how just a few years down the line, she’s already in the middle of this whole embarrassment. She got married in her early 20s, and yes, I get it, people were shouting “generational wealth”, “her kids will be set for life”, but how much money is enough to sacrifice peace, dignity, and happiness?”
“This entire situation was avoidable. She was already a thriving actress, with so much potential to build the life she wanted on her own terms. She could have still married someone closer to her age, someone she actually loved, and still had success and wealth, but without all this mess. It’s the same way some women are celebrating that babe for buying herself a Lambo the other day. The comment section was filled with “she won, she won!” And I’m just here wondering, won what exactly? She bought something with her own money. She was deferred in some way. How does that translate to winning?”
“I feel like Nigerian women don’t think long-term about certain things or don’t just believe in their own capabilities. There’s this obsession with “winning” in the moment, “peppering” someone temporarily, and being in some imaginary competition, but who exactly are you competing with? And then, years down the line, this is what happens.”
“I’m sorry, but I have zero pity for Regina. I hope she figures out her family issue, but this was completely avoidable. She was already on her way to doing well for herself and could have built an even better future without marrying that old “billionaire” Father Abraham man. But oh well, to each their own.”
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