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| Nigerian Disc, Jockey DJ Timmy and Timi Dakolo |
Key Takeaways
DJ Timmy has publicly accused singer Timi Dakolo of owing him money and issued a deadline for payment.
The show promoter warned that if the alleged debt is not settled by Monday, he would reveal details of Dakolo's alleged private affairs.
As of the time of filing this report, Timi Dakolo had not publicly responded to the allegations.
Nigerian disc jockey and show promoter, DJ Timmy, has publicly accused award-winning singer Timi Dakolo of failing to repay an alleged debt, escalating the dispute with a controversial ultimatum.
Naija Brain reports that DJ Timmy, in a post shared on his Instagram page on Friday, claimed Dakolo had failed to honour a payment agreement despite requesting that he temporarily remove a previous public post about the matter.
According to Timmy, it has been exactly one month since the singer allegedly asked him to archive his list of claims, yet the outstanding payment has not been made.
He warned that if the money is not received by Monday, July 20, he would expose what he described as Dakolo's alleged "s£xcapades" and other private activities in Lagos.
He wrote:
"Today is Friday, and Wednesday makes it one month exactly you begged me to archive my list, and still Timi Dakolo hasn’t paid us back.
"If by Monday 20th, the money doesn’t hit our account, get ready to explain your s£xcapades to your wife and all your little adventures in Lagos."
As of the time of publication, Timi Dakolo had not issued any public response to DJ Timmy's claims.
Related Development
The latest allegation comes shortly after Dakolo publicly accused President Bola Tinubu's Special Assistant on Digital and New Media, O’tega Ogra, of failing to pay him for a completed job.
In a post on 𝕏, Dakolo appealed directly to Ogra, writing:
"Mr @otegaogra please pick your calls. I did my job."
Responding to the claim, Ogra said he had seen the public commentary but would not engage in a prolonged exchange. He maintained that his public record speaks for itself and warned that any attempt to personalise the issue would attract formal correction and, if necessary, professional or legal action.
