A heated public dispute between Pastor Chris Okafor and controversial activist VeryDarkMan has taken a legal turn.
On December 25, 2025, lawyers for the Grace Nation Ministry founder formally announced a lawsuit against VeryDarkMan, real name Martins Vincent Otse.
The suit accuses him of cyber incitement, bullying, harassment, stalking, criminal defamation, and impersonation.
The conflict exploded after VeryDarkMan posted emotional audio and video interviews with women claiming to be Okafor's biological daughters.
They accused the pastor of abandonment, denial of paternity, and mistreatment, with one presenting a birth certificate on camera.
VeryDarkMan amplified the claims, calling the alleged daughters "your own flesh and blood."
Okafor's legal team swiftly denounced the allegations as "entirely false, malicious, and gravely injurious."
They disclosed that previous private DNA tests confirmed non-paternity following a marriage dissolved over infidelity.
One woman was reportedly sponsored to Canada purely out of goodwill.
The pastor's lawyers demand immediate retractions, public apologies in two national newspapers, removal of all offending content, and a fresh public DNA test.
Non-compliance will trigger full court action to protect his reputation and ministry.
This paternity saga comes on the heels of actress Doris Ogala's earlier December accusations.
She alleged an eight-year relationship, a broken marriage promise, and demanded hefty compensation.
Ogala faced brief arrest amid the fallout, with VeryDarkMan vowing to release more evidence.
As the case heads to court, Nigerians are divided, some await potential bombshell revelations, others rally behind the embattled pastor.
This clash of faith, family drama, and social media activism promises more twists ahead.

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