Blessing Okoro, known as Blessing CEO, has denied ever having stage 4 cancer, describing the initial announcement as a “miscommunication.” In late March 2026, she announced an advanced cancer diagnosis, shared what appeared to be a medical report, and received donations, including ₦20 million from Oilmoney and support from VeryDarkMan. Doubts emerged when online users spotted edits linking the report to another patient. Okoro now claims she made only ₦13 million from donations and refuses to share medical results or apologise.
Key Points:
Donors who gave money in good faith now feel deceived and demand refunds.
The controversy could lead to an EFCC investigation into possible donation fraud.
Okoro’s refusal to apologise may further damage her public reputation.
The incident raises questions about the verification of medical crowdfunding campaigns.
Legal threats from defrauded donors could follow if no refunds are issued.
Watch whether the EFCC launches an investigation and if Okoro faces legal action from donors demanding their money back.
Sources: Egungun IG.
I will not apologize to Nigerians for receiving money from them. I was able to make just ₦13 million through the donations. I cannot share my medical results online because they are personal. It was not my fault, I relied on what the doctor told me, that my br£ast lvmps were… pic.twitter.com/HiOMcVVmKB
— TENIOLA (@Teeniiola) April 4, 2026
