What began as a viral TikTok confession has spiraled into a high-stakes cultural debate, placing Nigerian singer Simi at the center of a social media firestorm. The controversy, which bridges 14-year-old tweets and modern-day allegations of “clout-chasing,” has reignited a fierce national conversation regarding sexual violence, false accusations, and the unforgiving nature of the digital archive.
The current cycle of outrage was triggered on February 18, 2026, when a TikToker known as Mirabel posted a graphic video claiming she had been raped and assaulted with a blade. The video went viral immediately, drawing widespread condemnation of the alleged act. However, as inconsistencies emerged, public opinion fractured.
The narrative shifted dramatically when controversial activist VeryDarkMan released a recording of a conversation in which Mirabel admitted the allegation was entirely false. Mirabel, identified as an 18-year-old orphan struggling with substance abuse and mental health challenges, reportedly created the fake account herself as a cry for help. While VeryDarkMan has appealed for public empathy and rehabilitation for the teenager, the case has been transferred to Ogun State for further investigation.
Amidst the initial outrage, Simi took to X (formerly Twitter) to address the broader issue of rape culture, urging men to hold one another accountable. Her stance—that sexual violence remains a pervasive reality and that false claims should not be used to silence genuine victims—was met with immediate pushback.
Critics accused the singer of being “tone-deaf” by focusing on systemic issues while a specific instance of a false accusation was unfolding. The backlash quickly turned personal, as users resurrected tweets from 2012 that they claimed suggested a darker side to the singer’s past.
The resurfaced tweets, posted when Simi was 23, describe her interactions with 4-year-old boys at a daycare centre. In one, she jokingly asks if she should “give a chance” to a child who had a “crush” on her; in another, she describes a child attempting to put his hand inside her shorts.
The screenshots were quickly weaponised by “netizens” who labelled the singer a pedophile and called for her to be “cancelled”. The derogatory nickname “Ikorodu Celine Dion” began trending as a meme to mock her.
Simi broke her silence with a lengthy statement, refusing to apologise for what she described as innocent, “cheeky” observations from over a decade ago.
“In 2012, I lived and helped out at my mom’s daycare while I was hustling my music,” Simi wrote. “I tweeted everything that happened in my life… Kids can be mischievous. If a child did something I found funny, I tweeted about it. Nothing I tweeted was from perversion.”
She argued that her current advocacy against sexual assault is a core part of her identity and not a “costume,” adding that she would not allow a “faceless mob” to twist her history into a false narrative. While her team has begun deleting the sensitive posts to protect her family, Simi insisted she remains steadfast in her message: “STOP RAPING WOMEN!!”
The incident has left the Nigerian internet deeply divided. One side demands strict legal accountability for false accusers like Mirabel, arguing that they damage the credibility of all victims. The other side—echoed by Simi—argues that the statistical rarity of false claims should not overshadow the very real and frequent violence women face daily.
As the Ogun State investigation continues, the “Simi Saga” serves as a potent reminder of how the internet never forgets—and how a single post can bridge a decade in a matter of seconds to challenge a public figure’s reputation.

