Key Points
- The post says Ned and Malik share near-identical birth dates. It claims both men are sixty-four this December.
- It argues the issue online is not real age. It says public taste favours wealth and polish.
- It frames the talk as culture not morality. It urges readers to judge less by birthdays.
A new post by Abdulwahab Aliu contrasts loud online scorn with quiet private interest. It names Regina Daniels (Regina Daniels) plus her husband Ned Nwoko (Chinedu Munir Nwoko) and compares him with Prince Malik Ado Ibrahim (Abdulmalik Ado Ibrahim). The focus is the claim that age matters less than polish and wealth.

The writer says Ned was born on 21 December 1960 and Malik on 22 December 1960. He calls them “age mates”, only one day apart, and says both turn sixty-four this year. Public records list those same December birth dates.
Aliu adds that some young admirers now message for links to Prince Malik after reports that his union with Adama Indimi ended. Court activity tied to their split has surfaced in recent weeks. For background see our recent piece on the appeal court custody hearing.
What the post claims
The note argues the outrage at Regina’s marriage is less about age. It says “presentation” and wealth shape how many people judge partners. It ends with a neat line, “Age isn’t the enemy. Poverty is.”
Context on both men
Ned Nwoko is a serving senator from Delta North and a long-time businessman. Malik Ado Ibrahim is an entrepreneur and 2023 presidential candidate of the YPP. Both are public figures with established profiles beyond private life.
The post also highlights an online double standard. It notes critics mock Regina yet praise similar matches when the man looks stylish. It urges readers to weigh conduct and stability over memes.
Recent days have brought fresh claims and replies around Regina and Ned. The senator has publicly addressed parts of the chatter in a long note. Read our report on how Ned Nwoko breaks silence for details.
The takeaway from Aliu’s post is simple. People talk about birthdays, yet social proof still drives taste. The author says money, grooming, and carriage often reset the room.



