- -Portable called out Cubana after a Tinubu meeting today. He said the visit looked like a private deal hunt.
- Cubana ChiefPriest defended his message to the president as honest advice. He denied meeting to push private contracts.
- Fans and commentators want clarity on what was discussed with Tinubu. They asked both men to publish details.
Portable (Habeeb Okikiola) publicly criticised Cubana ChiefPriest (Pascal Okechukwu) today after an Instagram exchange.

The posts followed a message Cubana sent to President Bola Tinubu that referenced national calm. Portable said the online posts suggested the visit did not push for Nnamdi Kanu’s release.
What Portable said
Portable said the visit was to seek government contracts and personal deals. He asked whether anyone had raised Kanu’s release in the meeting. Some readers questioned talks about contracts or Kanu in reporting on Tinubu visit.
Portable wrote that people fight for their own pockets while others suffer. He said no one can wield power beyond the government and God. His comments echoed a string of replies under a public post that showed Cubana addressing the president.
How Cubana responded
Cubana ChiefPriest posted a message to President Tinubu that urged calm and unity. He later explained his words as advice meant to steady public feeling. The post did not mention meeting details or talks about legal cases.
The exchange drew wider celebrity attention and public debate today. See wider views in celebrity reactions to Kanu verdict on our site. Fans split between those who criticised the meeting and those who defended private counsel.
Public reaction and experts
Many followers demanded clear answers about what was discussed in the presidential meeting. Observers said transparency would calm public concern and reduce rumours. Legal commentators suggested official statements could prevent misinterpretation.
Some commentators noted the common role of celebrities in public diplomacy and influence. They said celebrities must explain their public messages when they meet political leaders. The situation shows how fast private meetings become public scrutiny.
What happens next
Both men have not issued formal records of their meeting with the president. Officials in the presidency have not released a public account of the visit either. Readers and news sites now await any formal clarification or records





