When Pascal Okechukwu, better known as Cubana Chief Priest, stormed the limelight with champagne showers and celebrity bromances, few imagined his name would one day echo through Kenyan courtrooms—not for business, but for baby daddy drama.
Instead of agreeing to a simple paternity test, the Nigerian socialite has filed a lawsuit in Kenya against Hellen Ati, the woman accusing him of fathering her child. But here’s the kicker—the suit isn’t asking for a DNA test. It’s trying to silence her from calling him the father at all.
The Baby Mama Speaks, And She’s Not Backing Down
Hellen didn’t mince words. In a fiery video posted online, she tore into Cubana’s legal move, questioning why a man who claims he’s not the father refuses to prove it once and for all. Her tone? Fierce. Her message? Crystal clear.
“You’re scared of the truth, Pascal. You’re not in Nigeria now. This is Kenya. You can’t buy silence here.”
Her frustration was palpable. According to her, she’s begged for a DNA test for years. The alleged father? Radio silence. Now, after years of avoidance, he shows up in court not to clear his name but to shut her up.
Why File a Lawsuit in Kenya, Though?
One question is on everyone’s lips: if Cubana is truly innocent, why not just take the test? Filing a lawsuit in Kenya instead of Nigeria appears to be a calculated move—but it’s raised eyebrows. Some believe he’s trying to use legal pressure to dodge accountability.
Legal experts weigh in: by not asking for a DNA test, Cubana’s lawsuit doesn’t aim to solve the question of fatherhood. It aims to bury it.
The Court of Public Opinion Is in Session
While the court battle heats up, the internet jury is already delivering verdicts. Some fans defend Cubana, suggesting he’s protecting his reputation from defamation. Others are calling him out for using legal muscle instead of clearing his name the easy way—with a swab.
One comment online summed it up:
“If you’re not the father, prove it. What are you afraid of? Court orders can’t rewrite biology.”
Kenya Is Watching, Nigeria Is Talking
This isn’t just a personal feud anymore—it’s a continental showdown. A Nigerian celebrity battling a Kenyan woman on her home turf, with public sympathy slowly shifting in her favor.
If the lawsuit was meant to silence her, it’s doing the opposite. Hellen’s voice just got louder, and so did the spotlight