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In Condemnation Of 2Baba’s Serial Matrimonial Gaffes -By Isaac Asabor

What makes this even more tragic is the opportunity 2Baba had to rewrite his legacy. He had everything: talent, influence, a beautiful wife who believed in him, and a fan base that forgave him more times than he deserved. He could have used his story to redefine Black fatherhood, responsible manhood, and enduring love. Instead, he chose selfishness, again. Now, his legacy will not only include awards and albums, but also a public record of poor judgment and moral failure. Given the foregoing backdrop, it is expedient to opine that we must demand better from 2Baba. 

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2Baba

Innocent Ujah Idibia, popularly known as 2Baba, is undeniably a musical icon whose influence stretches across Africa. His artistry has transcended borders, and his lyrical brilliance, epitomized by the timeless classic “African Queen”, has earned him a lasting place as a source of inspiration. However, behind the rhythm, fame, and accolades lies a troubling personal narrative marked by a series of relationship missteps that are difficult to overlook.

While some may view commentary on 2Baba’s private life as intrusive or unfair, it is important to recognize the broader implications of his actions. As a public figure and role model to many impressionable young people, his personal choices inevitably carry social weight. Holding such figures accountable is not about moral policing, but about protecting the values society projects through those it idolizes.

In recent weeks, the spotlight has returned to 2Baba, not for a new album or social cause, but for yet another chapter in what is now an appalling trail of matrimonial gaffes. News of his decision to leave Annie Idibia, his wife of over a decade and the woman who stood by him through his youthful indiscretions and multiple baby mama scandals, for another woman, has thrown the public into emotional disarray. The backlash is not just about one failed marriage; it is a collective disappointment at a pattern of betrayal by someone millions have looked up to.

Let it be said clearly and without ambiguity: 2Baba is wrong. Not just wrong once, but consistently wrong in the way he has treated commitment, love, and loyalty.

To explicitly understand the background to this view, it is germane to opine that marriage, in any civil society, is a sacred commitment, not a revolving door. In fact, when 2Baba married Annie publicly, it was not just a romantic gesture; it was a promise witnessed by family, friends, fans, and the world at large. That vow carried weight. It stood as a statement that despite his past, he was choosing to do right by the woman who had endured humiliation and heartbreak for him.

By abandoning that vow for another woman, 2Baba did not just disappoint Annie; he spat on the very institution of marriage. Worse still, he sent a toxic message to his followers that commitment is a matter of convenience, not character. For someone of his public stature, this is both reckless and damaging.

Let us not pretend this is a one-time mistake. 2Baba’s history with women is as long as his discography. He fathered multiple children with different women before finally marrying Annie. While many chose to forgive and move on, believing he had matured into the man Annie saw in him, this latest move reveals that the leopard, indeed, has not changed its spots.

Rather than evolve into the responsible partner the public hoped for, he has continually treated his relationships as casual experiments. This is not growth. It is a pattern of indulgence masked as freedom, and it deserves condemnation, not admiration.

In fact, Annie Idibia’s loyalty, according to not a few Journalists covering Nigeria’s Entertainment Sector of the economy, cannot be overstated. She stood by 2Baba during his lowest moments, through scandals, pregnancies, and humiliations. Her tears were shed not behind closed doors but in full view of the world, yet she clung to hope, to love, to dignity. She believed in him when it was unpopular to do so.

2Baba’s choice to walk away from her after all that she has sacrificed is not just a personal betrayal, it is symbolic of what many women in our society endure. Women who give their all to men who, once successful or satisfied, discard them without remorse. His actions reinforce a dangerous precedent: that women are placeholders until men “figure themselves out.”

Some have argued that 2Baba is human and should not be held to a higher moral standard. That is a lazy excuse. Public figures like him enjoy fame, influence, and wealth precisely because the public buys into their brand, not just their music, but their persona.

When young people look up to 2Baba, they see more than an entertainer. They see an example of what it means to rise from nothing, succeed, and build a family. To see that image destroyed carelessly is to rob them of hope and a healthy blueprint for relationships.

By walking away from his wife and making a mockery of the marriage institution, 2Baba has shown that he is an unreliable moral compass. And if Nigeria is to raise young people who value commitment and integrity, we must stop defending poor behavior from those in power, whether in politics or entertainment.

Yes, every individual has the right to seek happiness. But when that pursuit becomes a pattern of abandoning emotional responsibilities, it is no longer freedom, it is emotional negligence. And in 2Baba’s case, it borders on abuse.

He has repeatedly exercised his freedom at the expense of others’ emotional wellbeing. Whether it is the women he impregnated, the children entangled in his domestic chaos, or the wife who fought for their home while he strayed, the wreckage of his personal decisions is well documented. It is time we stopped calling this “being human” and start calling it what it is: irresponsibility.

In Nigeria, there is a long-standing tendency to excuse men’s indiscretions as “normal” or “manly.” Society often tells women to pray, endure, and stay strong while men are allowed to chase lust under the guise of “nature.” This cultural complicity must end.

2Baba’s actions are not just personal, they are emblematic of a system that enables male entitlement and female suffering. If we do not call it out loudly and clearly, we allow a toxic cycle to continue, with our daughters paying the ultimate price.

What makes this even more tragic is the opportunity 2Baba had to rewrite his legacy. He had everything: talent, influence, a beautiful wife who believed in him, and a fan base that forgave him more times than he deserved. He could have used his story to redefine Black fatherhood, responsible manhood, and enduring love. Instead, he chose selfishness, again. Now, his legacy will not only include awards and albums, but also a public record of poor judgment and moral failure. Given the foregoing backdrop, it is expedient to opine that we must demand better from 2Baba. 

For the sake of clarification, it is expedient to opine at this juncture that this article is not written out of bitterness, but out of a responsibility to speak truth in a culture that increasingly blurs the lines between right and wrong. 2Baba may still be a musical genius. But in matters of loyalty, character, and respect for women, he has failed, and that failure must not be glossed over in the name of celebrity worship.

In condemning 2Baba’s serial matrimonial missteps, we are not being harsh. We are being honest. And in a society drowning in deception, honesty is the first step toward healing. Let 2Baba’s fall be a lesson that says talent does not excuse recklessness, fame does not erase betrayal and that public goodwill, once abused, is not everlasting.

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