- Fatima Mkambala, Juma Jux’s elder sister, expressed overwhelming joy after he and Priscilla Ojo welcomed their first child, Prince Raheem Ayomide Mkambala.
- She congratulated the couple, prayed for Iyabo Ojo, and described her nephew as a great blessing.

Fatima Mkambala, elder sister of Tanzanian singer Juma Jux, expressed joy over the birth of his son with Priscilla Ojo, Prince Raheem Ayomide Mkambala.
Sharing her excitement on Instagram, she congratulated the couple, prayed for Iyabo Ojo, and welcomed her nephew, calling him a great blessing.
“I feel like jumping to get there.
My joy is indescribable. Mother @iyaboojofespris, God will reward you for this. I have nothing to repay you, congratulations, dear @its.priscy mom Rakeem. You have been a great blessing to us and my brother. @juma_jux dady Rakeem bby rakeem welcome to the world @rakeem_mk”.
In other news…. Reno Omokri has criticized footballers, entertainers, and artists who lavish their earnings at the height of their careers only to end up broke and shift the blame onto the government.
According to him, such behavior reflects “mental laziness,” stressing that people in these fields should take personal responsibility for securing their future.
In a post shared via his X account, Omokri wrote …
“Footballers Can’t Enjoy The Proceeds of Their Success Alone and Then Outsource Their Failure To Society
Sportsmen, athletes, entertainers, and artists are not the responsibility of the government or society, except where they become civil servants, in which case they are entitled to a pension according to their terms of service.
An example would be Joe Lasisi, a staff of the Nigerian Customs Service, who was paid salaries, benefits and entitlements, even though he earned his own personal money from professional boxing.
It is regrettable if some national icons die broke or broken, however, responsibility for their end state should not shift from them to the public.
When and if they perform national assignments, they should be paid. If they are not paid, I recall that the public always fights for them until they do. Beyond their due payments, they often get gifts of money or property from an appreciative country after winning Mundials and tournaments.
Thereafter, what they do with those monies and property, as well as the largesse they get from their professional lives, is their business. And naturally, they do not share such payments with the government or the public. In fact, many of them do not even pay taxes in Nigeria.
To then grow old in poverty and blame the government or society, either by themselves or through their friends and family, is tantamount to mental laziness and unawareness of how the world works.
Sportspeople, athletes, entertainers, and artists also go broke in Europe, America, Canada and Australia. None of them blame the governments of those nations or even the public.
For example, and please fact-check me: Paul Gascoigne, a former English professional football player who played for England, is broke and suffering from depression after losing his £20 million fortune. Neither he nor his family have blamed anyone—Ditto for Trevor Sinclair.
It would amount to making themselves further objects of ridicule.
Such an entitled mentality means that persons who think like this do not understand how life works and are immature. In truth, they ought to have been placed under the care of persons who understood better how to manage their success and finances and prepare them for retirement.
You can’t enjoy your success alone and then want to outsource your failure to society.”
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