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Combined photos of Peter Obi and son, Oseloka
Oseloka Obi, son of presidential hopeful, Mr. Peter Obi, has for the first time opened up on his life and his father’s quest to lead Nigeria. In a strongly-worded statement issued yesterday, Thursday, August 21, 2025, Oseloka dismissed recent online attacks and false narratives targeted at him, describing them as distractions from Nigeria’s pressing challenges. He also unequivocally endorsed his father’s presidential aspiration based on merit.
In an open letter to Nigerians, Oseloka said he had long refrained from responding to “vitriol, scorn, and suspicion” directed at him, but decided to speak out after what he described as persistent and malicious fabrications.
“Because of my father’s involvement in Nigerian politics, there has been a persistent curiosity — and, at times, malicious obsession — with me,” he wrote. “I have no social media presence and no interest in maintaining one, so I rarely correct these falsehoods. But perhaps it is time I address them.”
He stressed that his father, not himself, is the one in politics and warned against attempts to politicise his private life. “To assume that my life or choices are somehow political statements is a flawed and childish calculation. It reveals more about the pettiness of those spreading such narratives than it does about me or my father,” he said.
Oseloka, who is a professional actor, also clarified misconceptions about his career path, noting that despite his father’s background as a businessman and economist, he chose a different field in theatre and filmmaking. He rejected insinuations of nepotism, declaring: “I was raised to know that my father’s wealth is not mine, and that I must build my own life.”
Addressing doctored claims based on his photos, he said: “These are not revelations. They are not exposés. They are simply misrepresentations; fiction spun from pictures. What is being circulated is gossip.”
He further argued that the fixation on his private life diverts attention from Nigeria’s urgent issues. “Our nation still struggles with insecurity, a weakened economy, crumbling infrastructure, failing healthcare, and politicians who steal from the people they swore to serve. And yet, for some, the priority is to spread gossip about who Peter Obi’s son appears with in a photo. This is a distraction from the real crises that matter to all Nigerians.”
Pledging support for his father, he wrote: “My father has my vote, not because he is my father, but because he is the right man for the job. If others wish to go low, invent scandals, or attack me to wound him, they are free to do so. But we will go high, and we will continue to focus on the future of Nigeria.”
He concluded by reiterating his commitment to values instilled in him since childhood: honesty, hard work, and service to others.
Here is Oseloka Obi’s statement in full:
Dear Nigerians,
I have refrained from engaging with the vitriol, scorn, and suspicion directed at me online because I was not raised to trade in lies or to indulge in false narratives.
I did not do so as a child, and I will not begin now as a grown man.
Because of my father’s involvement in Nigerian politics, there has been a persistent curiosity — and, at times, malicious obsession — with me. Why? I do not know. I have no social media presence and no interest in maintaining one, so I rarely correct these falsehoods. But perhaps it is time I address them.
I understand that gossip follows those connected to public life. But let me remind you: my father is the one in politics, not me. To assume that my life or choices are somehow political statements is a flawed and childish calculation. It reveals more about the pettiness of those spreading such narratives than it does about me or my father.
This pattern has become all too familiar: individuals opposed to my father seize ordinary photos of me — images that are neither hidden nor secret — and repackage them with false stories. These are not revelations. They are not “exposés.” They are simply misrepresentations; fiction spun from pictures. I have seen this happen to others but experiencing it myself repeatedly is deeply unsettling. Still, I want it to be known clearly: what is being circulated is gossip.
I am an actor by profession. Many are surprised, given the businessman, entrepreneur, and economist my father is. I’m sure he imagined I might follow that path — yet, though my career is far from what he envisioned, he supports me fully. Unlike many children of Nigerian politicians, I have never relied on nepotism. I was raised to know that my father’s wealth is not mine, and that I must build my own life. My chosen path is in theatre and filmmaking, so far from the world he inhabits — an industry that embraces diversity of class, race, sexuality, and identity. I portray characters vastly different from myself, yet some online use these roles against me and my father, presenting fiction as fact.
I trust any rational person can see how absurd this is.
More importantly, Nigeria has far greater issues than idle speculation about what Peter Obi’s son is doing. Our nation still struggles with insecurity, a weakened economy, crumbling infrastructure, failing healthcare, and politicians who steal from the people they swore to serve. And yet, for some, the priority is to spread gossip about who Peter Obi’s son appears within a photo. This is a distraction from the real crises that matter to all Nigerians.
The truth is simple: Peter Obi’s son appears in photos with his friends and colleagues, nothing more. If people wish to invent otherwise, I hope they sleep soundly knowing they are spreading lies.
Nor I nor my father are perfect men, and as father and son we have our differences. But I can attest to his integrity and his relentless desire to lead Nigeria out of its current hardships. In our home, as a child, the lesson was always clear: face your work, do it honestly, and contribute to the good of others.
That is what I will continue to do.
So, to those who attempt to distract us with lies: I beg you, stop pulling attention away from Nigeria’s urgent problems.
My father has my vote, not because he is my father, but because he is the right man for the job. If others wish to go low, invent scandals, or attack me to wound him, they are free to do so.
But we will go high, and we will continue to focus on the future of Nigeria.
With love,
Oseloka.