She was only six. Innocent, trusting, and unaware of the darkness that would shadow her life for the next 14 years.
Now 20, a Nigerian student has shattered her silence in a viral video that’s shaking social media. In a raw, emotional confession, she accuses a man named Friday Ameh Akuma of raping her when she was a child and claims he laughed about it just months ago.
The video, first posted on November 1, 2025, shows the young woman sitting in a simple room, her voice steady but eyes heavy with pain. She doesn’t scream. She doesn’t cry. She just tells the truth.

“He raped me when I was six,” she says, staring straight into the camera. “And three months ago, he mocked me for it.”
That recent encounter? A chilling exchange where Akuma allegedly threatened her life, called her “cheap,” and joked about “court marriage” if she dared speak out. He even asked for her photos, saying she had “grown fine.”

She kept the screenshots. She kept the trauma. And now, she’s keeping her promise: “I’ll post this every morning until the world listens.”
The accused, seen in a Facebook photo wearing a camouflage vest and posing near a motorcycle, reportedly works with an embassy, details the victim says make his arrogance worse. “He thinks he’s untouchable,” she claims.

Hours after the video dropped, a voice note surfaced from Akuma’s elder brother. Desperate. Pleading. “Please remove it,” he begs. “This happened over 10 years ago. My brother has been with the embassy… he even booked Cuba recently.”
He mentions speaking to the victim’s mother the night before. He calls the post “instigation.” He says it’s “not good.”
But the young woman refuses. “An apology won’t fix this,” she fires back. “Even if he rolls on the floor begging, it changes nothing.”
The post exploded online within hours. By midday November 1, the original clip, shared by @GossipMillNaija racked up nearly 20,000 views, hundreds of reposts, and a flood of comments demanding justice.
“Trauma has no expiry date,” one user wrote. “Arrest him now,” demanded another.
Some questioned the timing. Others shared their own silenced stories. A few urged her to go to the police or NGOs. But no denial has come from Akuma or his family.
This isn’t just another viral call-out. It’s a reckoning.
For years, the victim carried the weight alone. Her mother knew. The families stayed in touch. The crime was buried under shame, threats, and time.
Until now.
In a country where child sexual abuse cases often fade into silence, this young woman’s courage is lighting a fire. She’s not asking for pity. She’s demanding visibility.
And as long as the video spreads, Friday Ameh Akuma’s past and his alleged cruelty will follow him.
Will authorities act? Will justice finally knock after 14 long years?
One thing is clear: this 20-year-old student just made sure the world is watching.











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