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Home Entertainment Gossips

Fmr prez candidate, Kingsley Moghalu, faces backlash after ‘boasting’ daughter lives abroad

Rtn. Victor Ojelabi by Rtn. Victor Ojelabi
January 12, 2026
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Kingsley Moghalu backlash

Kingsley Moghalu

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Former presidential candidate Kingsley Moghalu sparks social media outrage after sharing an airport story about his daughter living abroad, with Nigerians accusing him of elitism amid economic hardship.

Nigeria’s class tension spilled violently onto social media over the weekend as former presidential candidate and ex–Central Bank Deputy Governor, Kingsley Moghalu, found himself at the centre of a digital backlash after a seemingly harmless personal anecdote detonated online.

What Moghalu intended as a light, reflective story about his daughter’s experience at Abuja’s Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport instead ignited outrage, resentment, and accusations of elitism from Nigerians already stretched thin by economic hardship.

The controversy began on January 11 when Moghalu shared a detailed X thread recounting how immigration officers questioned his daughter after recognising her surname and suspecting a connection to him.

According to Moghalu, the officials pressed her to confirm her identity, even requesting a photograph of her father, a move she resisted.

Moghalu framed the incident as ironic and humorous, noting that a “proper Nigerian” might have leveraged name recognition for preferential treatment.

But it was the very first line of the post that struck a raw nerve.

“My daughter, who lives abroad, was traveling back out of Nigeria…”

Kingsley Moghalu

My daughter, who lives abroad, was traveling back out of Nigeria when, at the immigration post at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, the immigration officials looked at her passport and, seeing her surname, asked if she was my daughter. She felt her privacy was invaded, and replied “No, this is a common name in the Southeast”. They disagreed, and asserted that the name was not common and they thought she was Kingsley Moghalu’s daughter. Can you show us a photo of your dad if he is not the person we think? Of course she refused to do so. “Daddy”, she texted me, “Can you believe the immigration people asked me to show them a picture of you? Of course I didn’t. What kind of madness is this!”.

I called her and we had a good laugh. “If you were a proper Nigerian, my dear daughter”, I told her, “you might have even announced your father’s name even when you were not asked. You would probably have received courtesies that would shorten your process at the counter”. But I told her I was glad she stood her ground, as indeed that was an invasion of privacy and asking for a photo of her father was improper in reality, although in all probability the questioning was well intentioned.

Name recognition carries many implications, mostly pleasant and humbling. I receive tremendous goodwill wherever I go in my country, and relatives consistently report the same whenever they are asked (and affirm) whether they are related to me. But my daughter, while of course proud of her father, is a stickler for propriety! 😂 She was well brought up!

For many Nigerians battling inflation, unemployment, insecurity, and the mass migration of young professionals, that single phrase landed like an insult.

Within hours, the thread was flooded with angry responses accusing Moghalu of flaunting privilege in a country where millions cannot afford food, fuel, or basic healthcare.

“This is peak elitism,” one user wrote bluntly.

Another replied, “My daughter who lives abroad from a Nigerian politician is not the flex you think it is.”

As the post went viral, Moghalu attempted to defend himself, insisting there was no bragging involved.

He pointed to his international career, noting he had lived and worked across four continents for the United Nations and served as a professor in the United States long before entering Nigerian politics.

That response only deepened the backlash.

Critics accused him of doubling down on privilege rather than acknowledging the symbolism of his words.

Some questioned why his daughter chose to deny him publicly, while others mocked his reference to a “proper Nigerian,” interpreting it as a justification of corruption and entitlement.

“So she is not a proper Nigerian then?” one user asked sarcastically.

Others were more scathing, framing the post as proof of the disconnect between Nigeria’s political class and ordinary citizens.

“You want a better Nigeria but your children must live abroad,” another commenter wrote. “That contradiction is the problem.”

Supporters rushed to Moghalu’s defence, arguing that his global career predated politics and that he should not be blamed for providing opportunities for his family.

Some grouped him alongside reformist figures like Peter Obi, insisting he was not representative of Nigeria’s traditional political elite.

But the outrage reflected something deeper than Moghalu himself.

The episode tapped into a national wound: the growing anger over leaders whose children enjoy stability abroad while citizens endure collapsing infrastructure, insecurity, and economic decline at home.

In a country defined by the “Japa” exodus, the mention of overseas comfort from a public figure was enough to reopen unresolved frustrations.

By nightfall, the thread had attracted hundreds of replies and thousands of views, transforming a personal story into a referendum on privilege, power, and perception.

For critics, it was not about a daughter at the airport, but about what Nigerian leadership looks like in a time of suffering.

Moghalu has not deleted the post. Whether he addresses the backlash directly or lets it fade remains to be seen.

But one thing is clear.

Also read: Kingsley Moghalu: Tinubu cannot fix Nigeria’s economy without a new constitution

In today’s Nigeria, no public figure is immune from scrutiny, and even a casual sentence can become a mirror reflecting the nation’s unresolved class wars.

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Rtn. Victor Ojelabi

Ojelabi, the publisher of Freelanews, is an award winning and professionally trained mass communicator, who writes ruthlessly about pop culture, religion, politics and entertainment.

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