A troubling image circulating online shows American YouTube star IShowSpeed wearing a Nigerian jersey. His face appears bruised. The caption is alarming. It claims he was attacked by road gang members in Nigeria while livestreaming along Ikoyi Road, Lagos. It suggests that visiting Nigeria was unsafe. It paints a picture of chaos.
The post originates from an X account, @iamMrMarfo1. From there, it spreads.
But what really happened?
First, letâs examine the context.
IShowSpeed, whose real name is Darren Jason Watkins Jr., was recently in Lagos. He celebrated his 21st birthday. He surpassed 50 million YouTube subscribers. On December 29, 2025, he launched a 20 country African tour in 28 days. On January 21, he livestreamed from Balogun Market in Lagos Island. Crowds gathered. Security escorted him. The scene was intense but public.
Soon after, posts claimed he had been attacked. The circulating images appeared to show facial injuries.
WHAT WE CHECKED
We examined the footage. According to reporting by Agence France Presse, the images were doctored. AFP traced the visuals back to specific timestamps in the original livestream. Moments at approximately 4:21:32 and 4:21:36 were manipulated to create the bruised effect.
AFP journalists who were physically present in Lagos during his visit reported that they did not witness any attack. They also heard nothing to suggest that an assault occurred. The altered images did not only appear in English. They spread in French, Arabic, Spanish, Hausa, and Zulu.
WHAT WE FOUND
It is important to note that IShowSpeed has faced disruptions during other international visits. In Algeria, he was struck by thrown water bottles during a football match. In Norway in 2024, he experienced an incident outside a shop.
But those are separate events.
There is no credible evidence that he was attacked in Nigeria. No verified report. No confirmed injury. No authenticated footage. The viral image was manipulated.
Verdict: False.
When dramatic images circulate, especially those that inflame fear or damage reputations, verify before sharing.
Screenshots can be altered. Livestreams can be edited. Context matters.
When President Tinubu nominated Professor Joash Amupitan as chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, social media erupted. âHe was Tinubuâs lawyer during the 2023 election case!â users claimed, warning that democracy was in danger. But is the outrage based on fact?
Verification: WABMA reviewed the Certified True Copies of both the Presidential Election Tribunal and Supreme Court judgments from the 2023 election petitions.
Amupitanâs name does not appear among the lawyers listed for Tinubu, Shettima, or the APC. Instead, the records show Professor Taiwo Osipitan (SAN) â a University of Lagos law professor â as one of the legal counsels.
The similarity between the surnames Osipitan and Amupitan seems to have caused the mix-up. No court record, statement, or credible media report links Amupitan to Tinubuâs legal team.
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It came fast. It came loud. And it came dressed as breaking news.
âMilitary coup in Cameroon! Paul Biya removed from power after 41 years!â
The video, shared on TikTok by a user named Jimmoexpress37, opened with dramatic music and flashing red text: âBREAKING: JUBILATION ACROSS CAMEROONâ âMILITARY TAKES OVER POWERâ âPAUL BIYA NO WHERE TO BE FOUNDâ
It claimed the coup happened around 5 a.m. The narrator spoke with urgency, describing a bloodless takeover triggered by public frustration over Biyaâs long rule. Soon after, the same video was clipped, shortened to 5 minutes, and pushed across WhatsApp groups in Nigeria, Ghana, and Francophone Africa. The mood? Celebration. Many believed a new chapter had opened in Cameroon.
But something didnât add up. There was no mention of the supposed coup on BBC, Al Jazeera, or Reutersânot even on Cameroonâs national broadcaster. For a coup in one of Central Africaâs most tightly controlled countries, this silence was deafening.
So fact checkers started digging. The earliest version of the video traced back to June 8, 2025, posted by a little-known YouTube channel called Jeunesse Panafricaine, with just 2,700 subscribers. The video seemed realâuntil you listened carefully. The narratorâs voice didnât quite match the visuals. Experts pointed out it carried signs of AI manipulationâthat slightly off rhythm, that synthetic clarity thatâs too perfect for amateur recording.
Then came the smoking gun: President Paul Biyaâs verified Facebook account was still active. Just hours after the videoâs circulation, Biya posted a message urging unity: âLet us not oppose our differences but confront our ideas⊠Letâs consider our ethnic or cultural differences as enriching factors.â He was clearly alive, well, and still president!
And history supports that. The last coup attempt in Cameroon was in 1984âand it failed. Biya, now in his 90s, has survived more than four decades of political storms. But there has been no successful or confirmed coup attempt since then.
So, what was the video? Likely, it was AI-enhanced disinformation, the kind used to test reactions, spark unrest, or push particular narratives. With AI, itâs now easier than ever to create the illusion of news without ever stepping into a newsroom.
And thatâs the real danger. False stories about coups can destabilize countries, trigger panic, or even justify preemptive crackdowns. In fragile political climates, lies about power changes can be as damaging as the real thing.
Conclusion: Paul Biya was not overthrown. There was no military coup. What there wasâwas a very real attempt to manipulate perception.
Across Africa and beyond, videos, reels, and tweets are shaping opinions, not always with truth. From fake bans to fictional buildings, from manufactured coups to fabricated scandalsâmisinformation thrives when facts are not checked.
At WABMA Debunker, we donât take posts at face value. We follow the facts. And we donât just question whatâs saidâwe question who benefits when itâs believed.