Key Points
- Mary Njoku shares concern after Regina Daniels posts a help video. She says the clip moved her to tears today.
- She warns fans against cruel comments under Regina’s posts. The actress asks people to show care, not mock pain.
- As a mother, she prays for voices to protect daughters. She says kind words can steady someone in crisis.
Mary Njoku (Mary Remmy Njoku) has weighed in on the ongoing Regina Daniels and Senator Ned Nwoko saga. The filmmaker says Regina’s morning video stirred deep emotion and should prompt empathy, not online scorn.

In her note, Njoku recalls watching Regina grow from screen teen to adult. She says seeing the same woman plead for help on social media broke her heart. For context on Regina’s own message, read our brief on how Regina Daniels explains video.
Njoku also points to harsh replies under recent posts and calls them needless. She says no one knows the full pain inside another person’s home. As a mother of two daughters, she says the story hit very close to home.
The actress adds a short prayer for any child who might face such fear. If a parent cannot be there at that hour, she hopes others will speak up. In her words, “This world can be wicked.”
Her message lands as supporters and critics trade strong views across platforms. Some friends urge space for calm talks, while others push for legal steps. Njoku’s stance sits firmly with compassion for the younger actress.
Calls for kinder online behaviour
Njoku asks fans to resist piling on when someone shares a cry for help. She notes that public shame solves little and may deepen fear or silence. She urges people to offer help, report crime, or simply hold back blame.
She further says motherhood shapes how she reads Regina’s posts this week. A daughter in pain, she argues, deserves hands to lift her, not stones. Short lines of care, she says, can make a hard day bearable.
Where the wider story stands now
Regina’s circle continues to share updates as the row unfolds. Some celebrity voices back her choice to keep distance until things are clear. Others urge caution about airing private fights on public feeds.
One recent plea came from a reality star who asked Regina to stay safe. For that reaction and context, see Phyna pleads Regina Daniels to avoid return. More family notes and police updates are expected in the coming days.
For now, Njoku’s post centres the human cost behind trending headlines. She asks readers to keep words simple, kind, and useful to the person in need. That tone, she says, helps real work happen off camera.
See her post below.






