Once again, Reno Omokri has taken to social media to showcase his unrivaled talent for delusion, dishonesty, and disgraceful political bootlicking. His latest attack on Peter Obi—an attack so bereft of facts, coherence, or integrity—proves, without a shadow of doubt, that Reno is not a commentator; he is a clown in the service of Nigeria’s corrupt establishment.
Thankfully, his tired propaganda was demolished with surgical precision by the brilliant Serah Ibrahim, whose factual takedown of Reno’s lies deserves not just applause, but archival preservation as an example of how to dismantle political deceit with grace, wit, and truth.

Let’s dissect this nonsense, starting with Reno’s ludicrous claim: “Peter Obi should not have gone to the stadium…He made an effort to make his presence known and felt…” and the ultimate comedy, “Peter Obi embodies division.” These are the deranged ramblings of a man whose only relevance today is in stirring controversy from the sidelines of politics, hoping someone—anyone—still takes him seriously.
Reno the Revisionist
Reno asserts that Obi’s presence at football matches brings bad luck to Nigeria, specifically referencing the AFCON final. The problem? Peter Obi wasn’t even at the final. Nigeria lost the one match he did not attend, while we won every game he was present for. In contrast, the actual guests at the final included APC figures like Shettima, Reno’s political puppeteers. By his own warped logic, if bad luck was present, it came with the entourage of failure Reno serves so loyally.

Serah Ibrahim rightfully reminded him of this glaring contradiction, exposing Reno’s attempt to rewrite reality with the grace of a cornered conman. She reminded the public that Peter Obi’s presence was not a political stunt—it was a people-driven moment. Fans chanted his name organically. No announcement needed. No PR gimmicks. Just love. The kind of love that Reno, and the soulless politicians he defends, will never know.
The Propaganda Factory
Reno Omokri has evolved from being a failed government spokesman to a professional propagandist for hire. He gaslights the public, twisting simple events into political weapons, all while hoping to rehabilitate the battered image of APC’s failures. He speaks of “unity,” yet supports a regime that has divided Nigeria across every fault line—ethnic, economic, and institutional.
It is the height of hypocrisy to claim that Peter Obi “embodies division” while praising the architects of Nigeria’s current suffering. What unity has APC brought to Nigeria? Is it the hunger, unemployment, insecurity, or the decimation of our sports institutions that Reno finds unifying?
Reno’s tweet wasn’t commentary—it was desperation. He saw Peter Obi’s presence overshadow every APC figure in that stadium. He saw love he could never buy with his propaganda. And it hurt him deeply. So he lied. Again.
Saluting Serah Ibrahim
Let us pause and recognize Serah Ibrahim, whose response should be printed and framed in every journalism school. She dismantled Reno’s lies piece by piece—with facts, clarity, and fearlessness. She showed us what principled dissent looks like in the face of a political parasite. She didn’t just defend Peter Obi—she defended truth, and in doing so, exposed the machinery of misinformation Reno Omokri has become.
Why Reno Must Be Ignored
Reno Omokri is not a voice of reason. He is a paid megaphone for the powerful and the corrupt. He wraps propaganda in performative intellect and expects Nigerians to nod. But we are not the fools he thinks we are. His record is clear: he lies, misleads, and gaslights.
He cannot be trusted. He should not be listened to. He belongs in the dustbin of Nigerian political discourse.
Let him howl in irrelevance. Nigeria is moving on. And yes, a New Nigeria is POssible—no matter how many times Reno Omokri screams otherwise.